Ratings6
Average rating4.2
I never should have gone commando in that dress.
I'm almost positive the rest of it wouldn't have happened if I hadn't been dangling off a hotel balcony with my lady parts in the breeze. And of course the one person to witness my mortification had to be HIM. Camden Cox.
Sure, today he's gorgeous and wealthy, and fine, I can admit he has a great sense of humor. But once upon a time, he was the boy who loved to make my life miserable.
He no longer pulls my pigtails, but I know his type. He wants one thing, and one thing only. A chance to get in my pants.
Nope. Not happening. Not even with that sexy Southern drawl.
But I'm Sophie Abbott, and if there's one thing I'm good at, it's making a mess.
Only this isn't just a mess. It's a disaster. A Sophie disaster.
Because after a wild night in Vegas, I wake up naked in his hotel room. And I'm pretty sure we got married.
Author's note: An adorkable hot mess who throws a cocky charmer completely off his game. Plus a salty dad playing matchmaker, laugh-out-loud banter, a couch scene that will melt your Kindle, and the swooniest of swoony happy endings. Marrying Mr. Wrong can be read as a stand alone.
Featured Series
4 primary books5 released booksDirty Martini Running Club is a 5-book series with 4 primary works first released in 2019 with contributions by Claire Kingsley.
Reviews with the most likes.
Oh, well, from the lofty heights of Obama's presidential memoirs which I enjoyed, I went on to read this. I needed a short moment of pure escapism and easy-going reading: “Please excuse me for a moment while I disengage my brain!”For that purpose, this novel worked well enough - albeit not perfectly but we'll come to that.Anyway, this is the third instalment of a loosely connected series about the romantic endeavours of a group of twenty-somethings (I guess). It started out well with Everly's romance with her boss (Calloway) and now we're reading about Sophie, Everly's successor as Calloway's personal assistant, who meets Camden Cox, a notorious womanizer.Sophie and Cox end up in Vegas where they “accidentally” marry each other in a drunken stupor. The remainder of the book is - expectedly - about how they find out they don't want a divorce.The ensuing chaos is amusing enough; ok, everything is clichéd and rather simplistic but that was to be expected. Worse, though: Every single character feels like an exaggerated parody of themselves and whereas Sophie is fairly likeable, Cox is - for the most part - annoying. This kind of machismo...»Ever so gently, I backed us out of the parking spot. A man did not simply drive a supercar. A man had to coax it. Caress it. Make love to it from the driver's seat and be respectful of its power.«... and what it says about Cox' ideas about women made me cringe. He constantly and unchangingly calls Sophie “sugar”. Uh... And she's pretty much fluttering her eyelids at him, enjoying his manly attention...So, while this book was still a funny romance, it was just a little too sappy, too simplistic and too clichéd for me to completely enjoy it and, thus, it only garners three out of five stars from me. Blog Facebook Twitter Instagram
I really liked this book. I loved Sophie more than other characters and the premise was so good! The writing was also much better than in the previous books in the series and I really loved the relationship between Sophie and Cox. I love marriage of convenience/accidental marriage trope and when the couple needs to figure out their feelings while they're together. Ngl, I cried during the third act breakup, it was much more believable than the ones in her previois books. It's my favorite book in the series and I'm so happy that I decided to read it! 4.3/5