Ratings10
Average rating3.6
New York Times bestselling author Nalini Singh stuns with a sizzling contemporary romance…
A bad boy wrapped in a sexy, muscled, grown-up package might be worth a little risk…
Molly Webster has always followed the rules. After an ugly scandal tore apart her childhood and made her the focus of the media’s harsh spotlight, she vowed to live an ordinary life. No fame. No impropriety. No pain. Then she meets Zachary Fox, a tattooed bad boy rocker with a voice like whiskey and sin, and a touch that could become an addiction.
A one-night stand with the hottest rock star on the planet, that’s all it was meant to be…
Fox promises scorching heat and dangerous pleasure, coaxing Molly to extend their one-night stand into a one-month fling. After that, he’ll be gone forever, his life never again intersecting with her own. Sex and sin and sensual indulgence, all with an expiration date. No ties, no regrets. Too late, Molly realizes it isn’t only her body that’s become addicted to Fox, but her heart…
Series
3 primary books6 released booksThe Rock Kiss is a 6-book series with 3 primary works first released in 2014 with contributions by Nalini Singh.
Reviews with the most likes.
Loved this book. Can't wait to read the rest. I don't remember the date I read it.
Oh my gods, but this was H O T! I have a marked preference for historical and urban fantasy/paranormal romances because the people who got me into the genre recced those kinds of books to me first, but I thought I'd give contemporary romance a shot to see if I'd like it. Since I already adore Singh's Guild Hunter novels, I figured giving a series written by her would be a good way to dip my toes into this corner of Romancelandia.
And wow. WOW. I wasn't sure what I was getting into when I decided to pick this up, but I am SO GLAD i chose to give it a try! Fox and Molly's story was squeeworthy and blush-worthy (whoo boy, was it ever!) but I kind of found myself wishing there was a bit more insight into the music industry than was depicted in this novel. TBF though, that's probably just because I'm coming from a historical/urban fantasy frame of reference for this sort of thing, so that's not a huge problem. Of greater concern would probably be how controlling Fox is depicted as being in this novel. Nothing truly objectionable happens, but there were moments that had my eyebrows going up a wee bit. But apart from that, this novel is smoking hot and I'm going to have to get the rest of the books in the series because WOW.