Monday, October 20, 2014

Book Review - Saving the CEO by Jenny Holiday




My Thoughts

Cassie meets Jack at the bar she works at and is very attracted to him. He feels the same way about her and acts on it a few times before offering her a job. He believes that his partner is stealing from him and asks her to take a look at his financials. Plus there is a very important deal he is working on and wants her help with that as well. Jack is one that likes boundaries and rules and Cassie makes him want to break all of that. 

I so adored Cassie. She is funny, sweet, and strong. Plus she pushes Jack way out of his comfort zone which was pretty steamy to read. Best scenes in the parking lot. HOT! I loved that Jack trusted her enough to share his secret and ask for her help. They really are wonderful for each other.

I give Saving the CEO 4 hearts!




About the Book

Real estate mogul Jack Winter has rules. Lots of rules. After all, a man doesn’t build an empire without a little discipline. And on page one of the rulebook? Don’t sleep with your employees. Especially when there’s a multimillion dollar real estate deal at stake...

Luckily for Jack, Cassie James isn’t really his employee. She’s a hot bartender who just happens to be the math genius he needs, and if they share a wicked chemistry? Well, that's just a sexy little perk. So they strike a deal: Cassie helps Jack with the merger. And until the deal goes through at Christmas, they can indulge every impulse they desire.

But the more rules Jack makes, the more he seems to break...

Purchase Links


About the Author

Jenny Holiday started writing in fourth grade, when her awesome hippie teacher, between sessions of Pete Seeger singing and anti-nuclear power plant letter writing, gave the kids notebooks and told them to write stories. Most of Jenny's featured poltergeist, alien invasions, or serial killers who managed to murder everyone except her and her mom. She showed early promise as a romance writer, though, because nearly every story had a happy ending: fictional Jenny woke up to find that the story had been a dream, and that her best friend, father, and sister had not, in fact, been axe-murdered.

From then on, she was always writing, often in her diary, where she liked to decorate her declarations of existential angst with nail polish teardrops. Eventually she channelled her penchant for scribbling into a more useful format. After picking up a PhD in urban geography, she became a professional writer, spending many years promoting research at a major university, which allowed her to become an armchair astronomer/historian/particle physicist, depending on the day. Eventually, she decided to try her hand again at happy endings--minus the bloodbaths.



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