Skip to main content

The Kiss Quotient

 

 

The Kiss Quotient by Helen Hoang


Published: Corvus 2018


#1 in The Kiss Quotient series


I don't know how I ended up loaning this from the Library but there it was, on my TBR, 
and I am so glad it was!

Stella Lane's mother is pestering her for grandchildren. 
Stella is a successful woman working in economics and, after realising she's not so confident 
with dating and relationships, does what every academic would do and researches.

Only Stella's research i sin the form of Korean-American male escort Michael. 

She requests that he teach her seduction, sex and how to be in a relationship but Michael 
never meets with a client twice. Can he bend the rules to help a girl out?

The more time they spend together... yadda, yadda, yadda.

OK yes, it's predictable - but Stella and Michael are great, well written characters. Their chemistry on the page causes sparks (should probably put a WARNING: sex scenes) in this review.

Huong also ticks major diversity boxes with her character Michael's ethnicity 
and Stella's aspergers (author Helen Huang also has aspergers).

I flew through this - loved it - and I'm looking forward to reading the next in the trilogy. 





Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Floored

 Floored By Sara Barnard, Holly Bourne, Tanya Byrne, Non Pratt, Melinda Salisbury, Lisa Williamson and Eleanor Wood Published 12 July 2018 MyKindaBook (Macmillan) I'm sure if you read YA, you will have heard of (if not already read) Floored. Seven successful authors collaborate on a novel - each writing a 'voice'. Sounds super complicated, I don't know how they did it... but they smashed it! The premis? Seven poeple get into a lift at a television studios, only six come out alive. No, this is not a horror story with zombies and mild to moderate peril, or a murder mystery thriller. It's about being human, being flawed and although life can floor you, you keep living. The teen voices are very real. Shit happens, they move on, move forward.  I loved the characters - all of them - which is rare. What I mean is, I loved and disliked them in equal measure but that makes the story whole.  Laura Callaghan illustrated the cover and chapter pages and I love the way she added ...

The Happiest Ever After

 The Happiest Ever After By Milly Johnson Published 15 February 2024 Simon & Schuster Thank you Simon & Schuster for the proof copy, here is my honest review. Polly Potter escapes her humdrum life with her writing. Gone is the unappreciative, unsupporting boyfriend who constantly takes her for granted. Gone are the work woes where her ideas and hard work are claimed by others and her boss is incapable of making himelf a cup of coffee. When she picks up her pen, Polly becomes no-nonsense Sabrina who lives life on her own terms, knows her own value and is forging fearlessly head onto a new life path. The day finally comes when Polly realises Sabrina is who she wants to be. Who's life she should be living and so she sets her own life changes into motion including speaking up for herself at work and leaving dreary Chris - which will happen as sooon as she can escape from the beige monstrosity she's wearing as bridesmaid to his bloody sister Camay's wedding vow renewal. ...

A Country Escape

A Country Escape by Katie Fforde Published by Arrow, 22 February 2018 Fran leaves the bright lights and hot kitchens of London for a rustic farm in the Cotswolds after receiving a letter from the solicitor of a long-lost relative. If Fran can make a go of the farm within six months, the owner Amy Flowers will leave it to her in her will. Amy is now in a nursing home but has a capable stockman to care for the farm's dairy herd. It takes a while for Fran to find her feet but with the help from her bestie Issi she soon manages to sort the curds from the whey and hits on a couple of ideas to make the farm pay. Dark clouds gather over the rolling green hills however in the shape of Australian Roy - another distant relation who hadn't originally answered Amy's letters. Just as Fran begins to feel at hope could it all go down under? This was a light, entertaining read. I really enjoyed the descriptions of the farming life. Amy is a great waspish character (I pictured Dame Maggie S...