The amazon blurb has covered pretty much of this novel, which ends, as good romances do, with she, Taylor, getting her man. But, the author set it in an un-sexy background: both Drew and Taylor's brother, Brian (boring name), owned fish canning factories. All that made me think of were entrails, dirt, blood and lingering smells - though luckily, none of those reared their ugly heads, nor their tails, pun intended, in this tale. And, the author in all seriousness used the phrase 'something smells fishy' in relation with an event to do with one of said canneries, which was pretty poor.
Yes, it was an OK enough, but things happened a little too quickly for it to be believable - and I mean the sex scenes in particular. Hot, yes, sexy enough, yes, but the pace? No, not believable. And Taylor suddenly going from virgo-intacta to outdoors-sex-in-broad-daylight-hussy, complete with nipple-less bra and lack of panties, in a mere 2 days just rang of desperation to titillate a not very titillating tale. But, some of Taylor's dialogue and thinking were sassy and witty, and fairly amusing. And, to have Taylor and Morgan, Drew's sister, discussing Taylor and Drew's sex/lovemaking is just TMI and soooooooo wrong! Just don't go there!!
A sort of decent enough read, but it would have been 1) far sexier if fish was not the dish of the day, if you'll pardon the pun 2) Drew was anything but a fish cannery owner 3) the author had spaced the pauses/chapters clearly, as all seemed to merge 4) Taylor had realised, in relation to her oft-dodgy brother, that if it smells like a fish, then it probably is a fish, no pun intended 5) the author hadn't included, again in all seriousness, the phrase 'Brian was looking fishier and fishier by the moment' coming out of Taylor's mouth.