In New York Times bestselling author Emma Chase's sizzling and hilarious debut novel, Drew Evans-gorgeous, arrogant, irreverent, and irresistibly charming-meets his match in new colleague Kate Brooks.
Drew Evans makes multimillion dollar business deals and seduces New York's most beautiful women with just a smile. So why has he been shuttered in his apartment for seven days, miserable and depressed? He'll tell you he has the flu. But we all know that's not really true.
Katherine Brooks is brilliant, beautiful and ambitious. When Kate's hired as the new associate at Drew's father's investment banking firm, every aspect of the dashing playboy's life is thrown into a tailspin. The professional competition she brings is unnerving, his attraction to her is distracting, his failure to entice her into his bed is exasperating.
Tangledis not your mother's romance novel. It is an outrageous, passionate, witty narrative about a man who knows a lot about women…just not as much as he thinks. As he tells his story, Drew learns that the one thing he never wanted in life, is the only thing he can't live without.
I'm sorry, but Drew is completely unlikable. He's basically everything you think of when you call a man a pig. You go into it really wanting to believe Kate can change him, but is he really capable of changing?
There was so much problematic stuff here. Drew doesn't really change as much as he decides Kate is the thing he wants and he's going to do everything he can to get her, even if it means being a pest and redecorating his apartment and maybe not having sex with every pretty girl at the club. But his process of getting her to agree to another date with him is basically just harassing her in increasingly embarrassing ways until she agrees just to get him to stop. Which is a big red flag in most normal circumstances, but when you're COWORKERS? Talk about an HR nightmare. There were also come transphobic and homophobic comments in the book that I didn't appreciate, even if the book was written in 2013.
I'm giving it 2 stars instead of 1 only because it was still entertaining in a really mindless way, if you didn't get yourself attached to the characters. I thought maybe I'd give the next book in the series a shot. Then I started it and saw that Drew had returned to his old ways and I couldn't go through it all again.