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Books | Fiction / Romance / Erotica
4.2
(90)
Olivia Cunning
New York Times and USA Today Bestseller! "Rock Hard hooks you with heat and reels you in with heart."—Cheryl Brooks, bestselling author of Virgin (The Cat Star Chronicles) He Craves Her Music and Passion On the rebound from the tumult of his bisexual lifestyle, notoriously sexy rock guitarist Trey Mills falls for sizzling new female guitar sensation Reagan Elliot and is swept into the hot, heady romance he never dreamed possible. She Can't Get Enough of His Body Ecstatic to be on tour learning the ropes with Trey's band, The Sinners, Reagan finds she craves Trey as much as she craves being in the spotlight. They Both Need More... When Reagan's ex, Ethan Connor, enters the scene, Trey's secret desires come back to haunt him, and pleasure and passion are taken to a whole new level of dangerous desire. Praise for Rock Hard: "Scorching love scenes...readers will love the characters."—RT Book Reviews, 4 Stars "The sex is incredible and the love is even better. Each rocker has a piece of my heart."—Night Owl Reviews, 5 Stars, Reviewer Top Pick
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Author
Olivia Cunning
Pages
416
Publisher
Sourcebooks, Inc.
Published Date
2012-11-06
ISBN
1402271530 9781402271533
Community ReviewsSee all
"Okay. Here we go...<br/><br/>Oh my stars...<br/>I HATED this book!<br/><br/>If they allowed a ZERO star, I would have given it, instead of wasting a whole star... <br/><br/>I stopped reading the series after finishing this book. <br/><br/>In fact, I stopped reading Olivia Cunning's books, period. That's how negatively this book affected me. <br/><br/>So much that I felt like I needed to come here and leave this review. <br/><br/>(I've never left a review on a book before, so...you understand.)<br/><br/>Here's why I hated this book. <br/><br/>Number 1: the author is unfaithful to her own character.<br/><br/>TREY was awesome in the previous books. He was the carefree, bisexual character, who was charming to the bone and I wanted to read his book to find out how he finally finds his LOVE. <br/><br/>But then, when I do finally reach the book, thinking that I was about to read some hot, threesome love story... I instead found myself, mentally yelling a couple of times throughout, "WHAT THE FUUCK HAPPENED TO TREY!"<br/><br/>He became this (confusing) asshole out of NOWHERE.<br/><br/>He lead the female love interest on, only to tell her later that he can't come without having a man penetrate his ass. So, he basically just told the poor girl that her ***** isn't enough to satisfy him. Which brings me to...<br/><br/>Number 2: Olivia (the author) needs to learn what being bisexual means! <br/><br/>In fact, let this be a lesson to everyone who thinks bisexual people are "cheaters" or "individuals who can't be satisfied with only one partner." <br/><br/>This ******* book gave bisexual people a BAD name. As if the world alone isn't already calling us "confused," "dissatisfied," ec... This ******* book has to come along and perpetuate those stereotypes.<br/><br/>I DESPISED Trey after this book and he was my FAVORITE character up until his own book. <br/><br/>And it was mostly because of the way he treated the female character that I hated him. <br/><br/>Poor girl. She deserved better than this mentally-challenged douchebag.<br/><br/>I mean, I can understand if Trey can't be satisfied with this female, maybe it's because they weren't meant to be, or because she's not so good in bed, or maybe he needs to SEE A ******* THERAPIST IN ORDER to figure out what's wrong with him; why he can't come when he fucks a *****. And can only come when he's being ****** in the ass. <br/><br/>Seriously why couldn't you just make him gay, Olivia Cunning? You just HAD to call him "bisexual?"<br/><br/>I would have liked the book better as a love story between the two men without you having to drag the poor girl in there and humiliate her. <br/><br/>Bisexual, my ass. This character is mentally...or physically damaged. Because I know for a fact that being bisexual, in NO WAY means that you have to have BOTH of the sexual organs at your disposal to be happy in a relationship. <br/><br/>Being bisexual means that you ARE attracted to BOTH GENDER and CAN be satisfied by either one or the other.<br/><br/>Being bisexual doesn't mean that you find one organ or gender more stimulating/or better than the other and prefer one over the other. <br/><br/>It means that you prefer BOTH and could have either. That's the whole ******* point! Because otherwise, you should just call yourself gay or lesbian or any other label you feel like calling yourself, but NOT bisexual.<br/><br/>The author could have at least done her ******* research before writing about a bisexual character. The definition is pretty straight forward but if she still could not comprehend it, Google was always at her disposal, and the world is full of us, she could have asked a bisexual person what being bisexual is, for God's sake.<br/><br/>But since Google apparently failed her, let me be the one to explain that being bisexual means that you will find a man OR a woman attractive. And it doesn't mean that you NEED both to be happy or satisfied either. It just means that you'd be happy with either one. <br/><br/>While reading this book, the whole time, I was feeling so sympathetic towards (Reagan) the female character, that the author seemed to enjoy mistreating throughout this piece of crap-book. <br/><br/>I felt so bad for her. <br/><br/>How can Trey treat her that way? <br/><br/>Telling her she wasn't ENOUGH for him after pulling her into a relationship then CHEATING on her with the guy!<br/><br/>Seriously, Trey is ******* lucky that he is fictional or I would beat the **** out of him. <br/><br/>And <br/><br/>I'm done with you, Olivia Cunning. <br/><br/>I've blacklisted you. <br/><br/>#SorryNotSorry"