Play
Books | Fiction / Romance / Contemporary
4.2
(126)
Kylie Scott
A famous rock'n'roll drummer – and a girl who wants nothing to do with the spotlight. Play is a passionate romance, and the second book in the steamy Stage Dive series from Kylie Scott.Malcolm Ericson is the dreamy drummer for Stage Dive – loved by all the ladies and the envy of his peers. Strumming up a new hit and working the crowd comes easily to him. But, behind his cool exterior, he wants more than the fast lifestyle.Mal needs to clean up his image fast – at least for a little while. He was never a conformist, but having a good girl on his arm should do the job just fine. Anne Rollins never thought she'd ever meet the rock god who plastered her teenage bedroom walls. But she has money problems. Big ones. Her roommate has left her high and dry in debt, and being paid to play the pretend girlfriend to a sexy, wild, life-of-the-party drummer is a tempting offer . . .The rock'n'roll steam continues in book three, Lead.Five Star Reader Reviews:'Anyone who likes HOT, sexy rock stars then this is a must read!!''Mal and Anne's relationship is one of my most treasured relationships in a book''Mal is hilarious, he's character perfection. And Anne is the perfect compliment to him and his shenanigans'
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More Details:
Author
Kylie Scott
Pages
288
Publisher
Pan Macmillan
Published Date
2014-04-01
ISBN
1447260554 9781447260554
Community ReviewsSee all
"Ok, on second read this was cute. Kind of weird, but cute. It doesn’t really fit the “fake relationship,” trope though, which was the whole reason I’d read this to begin with.<br/><br/>Mal is a little out there. Anne is also a little out there. And neither of them are sharers, which is the basis of every conflict in this book. It’s kind of annoying because there are literally fights that begin and end with Anne being swept out of the room before you (the reader) can even make sense of what is happening.<br/><br/>Anne tries too hard to be aloof during the novel, which makes her character come across as just starstruck by her largest celebrity crush. Mal is excellent at trying to communicate…BUT, he’s a little “xDDD random;” which is grating.<br/><br/>I LIKED this book better than I liked Lick. It’s cute and the end made me happy.<br/><br/><br/>First Review: I’m very torn about this book. It felt incredibly strange. Like…what did I just read, anyway? I think I liked it but…what? This entire thing developed out of nowhere. Mal is scatterbrained as heck, and his character reads like a kid with ADHD. Then there’s Anne, who Mal calls a doormat five minutes after meeting her and she spends the whole book proving the guy right.<br/><br/>It’s goofy, and cute…but there’s nothing here that made me think “wow, that was something!”"