I Want You to Want Me by Erika Kelly

I Want You to Want Me (Rock Star Romance, #2)

by Erika Kelly

From the award-winning author of You Really Got Me comes the next romance in her red-hot Rock Star Romance series, about a rocker who lives for his music—and loves with all his heart.

Derek Valencia finally has the success he’s worked so hard for. His band is touring its debut album and great reviews are rolling in. But when pictures of him tossing naked groupies off a balcony go viral, it’s damage-control time. He’s assigned a “babysitter” whose sole job is to keep him out of trouble.

Violet Davis swore she’d never work in the music industry again, but being a minder for a rock star will earn her enough to pay off the mortgage on her wildflower farm. And for a girl brought up in the foster care system, owning her own home means more to her than anything.

Though at first the two bang heads, the rocker and the farm girl soon grow close and realize that they make sweet music together. But can a girl who craves the stability of life on a farm really make it work with a man whose life is spent on the road with his band?

Reviewed by EBookObsessed on

4 of 5 stars

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A great story with fabulous characters. I have already downloaded Book 1 from the series so I can read Emmie and Slater’s story.
Blue Fire is finally making it. Their first album is working its way up the charts and they are on their first tour playing some festivals and opening for some big name bands like U2 and Kings of Leon. If all goes well, someday someone will be opening for them. But not everyone in the band is handling their first taste of stardom very well. Slater has Emmie to keep him focused on what’s important and Derek is busy dealing with the press and promoting the band. The rest of the members might have too much time on their hands for fun.

At the outset, the band pledged to keep their heads over the alcohol, drugs and the women but the aftershow parties are getting crazier and crazier each time. One party brings too much negative attention in the press and their A&R man, Irwin Ledger, is ready to walk away from them. Losing a big name like Irwin would trash the band’s reputation and destroy their chances of success before it even starts. Who would work with them if Irwin walked away? Emmie makes a desperate call to her friend, Violet.

Violet Davis is a sober companion. She has helped several big names stars and corporate executives reclaim their lives and their reputations after losing themselves to drugs and alcohol. Violet helped Irwin’s daughter reclaim her reputation and Irwin respects her. With Violet helping control the situation, the band might just be able to save their relationship with Irwin and get back to what’s truly important — the music.

Violet always goes into a situation undercover. She steps in as either a girlfriend or an assistant to whoever she is helping and in this case, Violet falls into the role of Derek’s girlfriend. The longer Derek and Violet work together the more the lines blur between real and make believe. Violet knows that she is fighting the inevitable since the attraction between them is so strong, but her reputation is all that she has and sleeping with a client is not going to help her own career down the road.

If they give in to temptation, they could both lose their jobs and destroy their reputations but if they don’t give a relationship a try, will they lose something even greater?

THOUGHTS:
Let’s start off with the fact that I like that Erika Kelly chooses to makes her rock bank just starting out. This is their first tour with their first album still climbing the charts. Blue Fire (renamed by their new A&R from Snatch) is dealing with their rising star so they are not yet jaded by life as rock stars and they are only just starting with the attention and the groupies. Some members are like kids going off to college and having their first taste of freedom and they are going a little overboard with the parties. These rockers are trying to deal with this shiny new spotlight, including the women and drugs that go with being a rock star. It brings us in at a different place than other stories where the rockers are a well established and big name draws already.

Part of this is also Derek needing to prove himself both to his father, who was once a big name jazz musician, and to himself that he is truly a musician and not just flash and noise. Derek has a lot of issues with his father, first that he was ignored growing up and never allowed to be around the music and musicians who would hang with his father, and now that Derek’s star is rising and his father’s has long since fallen, his father his seeking attention in the media by disparaging Derek’s talent and his music. This is what Violet does best and I loved the way she handles his father and turns it all back on him in the media while teaching Derek how to handle these situations instead of simply being angry and overwhelmed by what his father is saying about him.

My one problem with this story was that we spent most of the book with both Violet and Derek being very accepting and understanding of each other’s baggage. They spent most of their time thinking, I understand why you are acting that way even if it hurts me, and keeping a calm head. We spend a good deal of time with Derek needing to do something special for his career to prove himself as a musician with Violet constantly encouraging him to make the leap of faith. When he finally does and tells Violet that he needs her there with him, she goes “I got to meet a new client so I can’t make it.” I really wanted to jump in the story and punch her in the face. The whole story is “You have to do it. You have to do it.” and when he finally does, she can’t give him a “Let me try to reschedule. I know how important this is for you.” So after a whole book of two thoughtful adults trying to be understanding of the difficulties of each other’s childhood traumas and career goals, they have tantrums and attack each other like children until we have a sudden turn around at the end for a HEA.

Overall, I liked the characters and I liked the story. I just felt the ending was suddenly out of character for both of them, like someone tapped the author on the shoulder and told her that there had to be a break up and a get back together, so she was forced to make something up and it just didn’t fit. We were in both of their heads the whole story and knew how they felt about each other. This sudden conflict felt so off and out of character it just didn’t work.

I already picked up book 1 so I can read about Slater and Derek’s sister, Emmie. I will definitely will follow the rest of this series to see how it goes.

Received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 6 July, 2015: Finished reading
  • 6 July, 2015: Reviewed