VBT# If I Say Yes - Brandy Jellum




Review: If I Say Yes - Brandy Jellum - Book #1 Say Something Series - May 2014

Six years ago, Elizabeth Lewis came home to witness a horrible scene - her mother stabbed to death by her father and his words she never forgot "I did this for us". Now six years later, she has re-invented herself and strayed far away from everything that made her Elizabeth Lewis and she is now Liza Winters - an agent for the publishing company HLAH. The thing is though, she is stuck in the Romance department and Liza detests romance with all her heart and soul and longs to move into the Horror section as she loves the thrill of the novel and not knowing who it is till the very last page. This may not come fast enough for her though as she gets a new boss - the nephew of the owner of HLAH - Reid Harder and it seems that he has his eyes set on Liza. When he asks her out, she says no - knowing that if she does go out with him, she may have to start facing her past life. What will happen though when she starts to receive email threats from someone that knows all about her past life and what her father did ? Is Liza safe or does someone want to finish what her father started and believes that she was her father's next victim or at least the guys involved in and around her life ? If that wasn't bad or deadly enough , Reid her new boss is being his own version of Katy Perry's song Hot/Cold. I loved the character of Liza Winters and her best friend Elias aka Eli but personally I hated Reid as guys who won't say what they want or mean and that act Hot one minute and Cold the next frustrate me and I felt like screaming at Reid to grow up and stop being such a prick one minute and then the nicest guy the next especially when Liza had other things on her plate.
If you love romantic suspense and books - publishing then this is the read for you and I loved the little Pretty Little Liars twist with the Anonymous notes signed by "A".





Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Review: Steel Princess - Rina Kent

Review: Punk 57 - Penelope Douglas