A high-octane thrill ride from USA Today best seller C. D. Reiss.
Theresa Drazen wants to know one thing: Is there something wrong with her? Because from what she can see, she has money, brains, and a body that does the job. Yet she keeps getting shelved―most recently by her fiancé, who happens to be the DA.
And she’ll get over it, really. No problem. She’ll just have a nice, short encounter with a mysterious Italian named Antonio who may or may not be involved with some kind of alleged criminal activity…blah, blah….
Let’s call a spade a spade: He’s a mobster.
Let’s face a few more facts. He’s hot. He’s smart. And if anyone breathes on her the wrong way, he’s got no problem beating their head against a Porsche until they’re willing to lick up their own vomit to make it stop.
Just about everything about that turns her on.
Yeah. There’s something wrong with her.
Mature audiences. Rough sex. Dirty talk. Criminal activity. Cursing. Fisticuffs. Closed course. Professional driver. Do not try this at home.
5 stars! Spin, book 1 (3). Alleged mob boss Antonio Spinelli & Theresa’s worlds of politics, movies, mafia & corruption collid “How straight you are for the world, and how you bend and cry for me. I want to go so deep in you we have the same thoughts.”Â
Just OK I loved Songs of Submission and eagerly awaited the release of this first book in her new series. The writing itself is very good and much better than you get in many romance novels but I just didn’t connect with Spin and Theresa. Spin was more dark and violent mobster than sexy alpha male. We get a few glimpses into how he became “capo” of a crime family but his character is not nearly well developed enough for me to see him as anything more complex than a rich thug who has become…
A highly addicting, wild, and erotic ride. I suspect that CD Reiss somehow laced my e-reader with a powerful narcotic, because when it comes to her books, there is a very addicting quality to them. I read the Songs of Submission series a couple of months ago, and was completely engrossed by them. Reading Spin (Theresa’s spinoff) was just as addicting, but a story and characters completely different. Since I can’t prove she’s slipped me some highly addictive drug, I’m left with the simple fact that Reiss is a brilliant writer. The way…