Don’t trust lust at first sight.
Eye Candy
Real Love, #1
Real Love, #1
by Jessica Lemmon
Releasing July 25th 2017
Loveswept
Loveswept
Don’t trust lust at first sight. One woman chooses reality over fantasy in this
friends-to-lovers romance.
The Book Junkie Reads . . . Review of . . . EYE CANDY
(Real Love, #1) . . .
Eye
Candy has me drooling for more. The men are tantalizing, teases. This read was
sweet, sexy, sensual, and tempting. Vince wants the girl, Jackie. Jackie wants
that hot eye candy that jogs past her office window. Vince being the good guy
and best friends wants to help her out even though he wants her. The good guy
antics gets him much more than he hoped for. He wanted to be the rebound when
the eye candy messed up. He just didn't expect for all this.
This
was a fun chick lit read that gave you much to enjoy. Sexy men. Sexy times.
Laughs. Female with one track mind. A great friend that wants to make it all
happen. I found Jackie to be a bit
self-center, self-absorbed, selfish. She only seemed to think of her wants. She
did not seem to see or understand Vince. Vince on the other had was an all-around
good guy, with the exception of his male induced idea to hook her up with eye
candy and swoop in to save the day.
I found
this to be a good start to this new series from Jessica Lemmon.
Real Love series:
Eye
Candy – Real Love, #1
Arm
Candy – Real Love, #2
Man
Candy – Real Love, #3
Blurb
Jacqueline: As an adult woman—and the vice president of a marketing firm—I shouldn’t be waiting by my office window to ogle the mystery man who jogs by every morning at 11:45. Sure, he’s a gorgeous, perfect specimen of the human race, but I can’t bring myself to hit on a total stranger. However, my best friend–slash–colleague Vince Carson thinks I should do more than talk to the guy. In fact, he’s borderline obsessive about “getting me laid.” (His words.) But the more time we spend together, the more it’s clear: The one I’m falling for is Vince.
Vince: Jackie Butler’s got it bad for some pompous, over-pumped A-hole who struts his stuff past her window. That doesn’t bother me. I know she deserves nice things. What does bother me is that she friend-zoned me big-time last year, so I can’t ask her out myself. But what if I set her up with Mr. Steroids? Then, when he breaks her heart, I can swoop in and save her like the nice guy I am. Everything’s going according to plan . . . until we share a ridiculously epic kiss. And suddenly anything is possible.
Jacqueline: As an adult woman—and the vice president of a marketing firm—I shouldn’t be waiting by my office window to ogle the mystery man who jogs by every morning at 11:45. Sure, he’s a gorgeous, perfect specimen of the human race, but I can’t bring myself to hit on a total stranger. However, my best friend–slash–colleague Vince Carson thinks I should do more than talk to the guy. In fact, he’s borderline obsessive about “getting me laid.” (His words.) But the more time we spend together, the more it’s clear: The one I’m falling for is Vince.
Vince: Jackie Butler’s got it bad for some pompous, over-pumped A-hole who struts his stuff past her window. That doesn’t bother me. I know she deserves nice things. What does bother me is that she friend-zoned me big-time last year, so I can’t ask her out myself. But what if I set her up with Mr. Steroids? Then, when he breaks her heart, I can swoop in and save her like the nice guy I am. Everything’s going according to plan . . . until we share a ridiculously epic kiss. And suddenly anything is possible.
VINCE
Admittedly, giving
Jackie advice on how to get a guy to sleep with her is not my best plan.
“Okay, Butler,” I say, fully focused on Jackie now.
“Let’s hear it.”
She stops scribbling on the napkin in front of her, and I
bite back a smile. Since I’ve given her a few tips, she has been frantically
taking notes. She’s a planner. I’ve always been more go-with-the-flow.
She reads over her notes, squinting in concentration, her
lips moving as she reads. Then those golden brown eyes hit mine and she gives
me a resolute nod. “I’m ready.”
Her tongue swipes pink lips, making them glisten and
making me regret again the route I’ve chosen to take with her. Part of me
concedes I could call it off and tell her what I really want, but I know her.
She’s barely convinced she can ask a dude out, so her best guy friend throwing
a date on the table would be an automatic no.
“Let’s see it,” I say, kind of excited to see what she’s
come up with.
She takes the empty seat next to me and leans heavily on
an elbow, fist under her chin. “Hi. I’m Jackie.”
I blink several times in quick succession at the
transformation from my scatterbrained best friend to a gorgeous woman giving me
bedroom eyes. She’s pretending. I’d do well to remember that.
“Vince,” I introduce.
She straightens in her chair and frowns. “Shouldn’t you
pretend to be J.T.?”
“I’m not that good of an actor, Butler.” And I’m not
pretending to be that jerk.
“Fine.” She rolls her eyes, then slides into seduction
mode so swiftly I find myself impressed. She’s better at this than she’s let
on. “Do you have a last name, Vince?”
“You know my last name, Butler.”
“Call me Jackie.” She gives me a slow bat of her lashes.
My smile is real, and when I lean closer, I don’t even do
it on purpose. “Well, Jackie. Last names are irrelevant, don’t you think?”
Her chest lifts as she takes a breath, and I’m not shy
about checking out her cleavage, exposed down the V of her shirt.
Normally I wouldn’t look so obviously, but this is a game. Our game.
“That’s very assuming of you, Mr. No Last Name.” She
quirks her lips in that way she has, and my smile broadens. “But let’s say”—she
moves her half-full wineglass onto the cocktail napkin she wrote on—“for
argument’s sake, you’re right, that last names are irrelevant.” She runs the
tip of her finger along the rim of her glass like she’s doing it
absentmindedly.
She’s doing it on purpose. I can tell.
Damn. She’s good.
“We should have a real date before making plans, don’t
you think?” she asks, her eyes on mine.
“Yes.” Hell, yes. “Dinner, at the very
least.”
“And then if dinner works out . . .” She lets that
statement hang and my heart beats triple time as I wait for what comes next.
“We can talk about dessert.”
“We can talk about dessert now.” I’m transfixed on her
and the idea of exploring our new dynamic.
“Ohmygod.” Her eyes go wide. “Would he
say that?”
I give myself a mental shake when I realize I was caught
up in the conversation. It was one I wanted to be real, and she was thinking
about Running Man.
“Probably,” I say, the spell broken. “Guys are assholes.
Like I said.”
I lean back in my chair, find a TV, and stare blankly.
“But if that’s the case, I’ll have to have sex with him
sooner than I planned.”
“No, you don’t, Jackie.” I hear the anger in my own
voice. Because . . . “You don’t have to have sex with anyone. You could go to
drinks, dinner, and dessert with this guy—you could end the night with tonsil
hockey on your front porch or his, and you can still say no.”
She purses her lips. I hate the idea of her kissing that
jackass. No matter what kind of person he is—even if he’s a volunteer
firefighter who raises orphaned squirrels so they can perform at the local
senior center—I hate him.
“Tell me you know that,” I say.
“I know I don’t have to. That’s not what I meant. I
don’t want to chicken out. I want to get the first one over with. Like you
did.”
I tip my head back and groan aloud. I can’t help it. I’m
the example for her return to the dating world? Much as I don’t want to admit
it, fair is fair. I salved my wounds with girls like Polly, so why can’t Jackie
do it with J.T.? Jackie’s my friend and I care about her. I can’t make a double
standard now.
“Besides, he’s really hot,” she says, her face going
glowy.
“Spare me.”
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A former job-hopper, Jessica Lemmon resides
in Ohio with her husband and rescue dog. She holds a degree in graphic design
currently gathering dust in an impressive frame. When she’s not writing
super-sexy heroes, she can be found cooking, drawing, drinking coffee (okay,
wine), and eating potato chips. She firmly believes God gifts us with talents
for a purpose, and with His help, you can create the life you want.
(a Mrs. Fields Mini Ribbon box ($19.99-$22.99 value) (U.S.
only))
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