Book picks similar to
The Billionaire's FAKE Bride by Lena Skye
bwwm
contemporary-romance
interracial-romance
hero-is-an-actor
Resist
K. Bromberg - 2019
Rich, handsome, and more than intriguing, he thinks blackmail will bend me to his will.But he’s wrong.I may have done a few things that weren’t exactly legal, but I have my own reasons for that. The last thing I’m going to do is let some high-powered divorce attorney come into my life, have my body, and rule my heart. Not to mention ruin everything that I have carefully built in just a short amount of time.But as much as I try to resist him, and against my better judgment, there is something about him that has me agreeing to his proposal.I’m putting everything on the line for him. I just hope I won’t lose everything when this is all over.
One is a Promise
Pam Godwin - 2017
My dark rebel in leather. My powerhouse of passion, devastating smiles, and impulsiveness.When his job sends him overseas, he promises to return to me.A promise that’s destroyed in the most irrevocable way.Two years later, an arrogant suit invades my heartbroken loneliness.Clean-cut and stern, Trace is everything Cole wasn’t.At first, he’s a job that will rescue my dance company. But as he intrudes on my life, our hostile relationship evolves.He knows I’m still in love with Cole, but his dedication is my undoing.Then a catastrophic moment changes everything.Promises resurface.Lies entangle.And an impossible choice shatters my world.I love two men, and I can only have one.The TANGLED LIES series must be read in order.One is a PromiseTwo is a LieThree is a War
Wifed 1: A Bad Boy Billionaire Romance
L.N. Pearl - 2017
Others say that I’m nothing more than a playboy. But they all agree to say that I’m a bad boy. I’m the kind of a man you don’t want around your daughter, especially if she’s beautiful. In other words, I’m parents’ worst nightmare. I used to be proud of this infamous reputation until it became a major roadblock for my career. My father is getting old and someone needs to take over the family business. It’s supposed to be me, except that the board members will do anything to make my life a living hell–like hiring an outsider to become the next CEO. Why? Because they can’t get laid as much as I do and they can’t stand me. They envy me. They resent me. They want me to change. They want me to settle down. My only option is to give them what they want, even if I need to fake it. There’s only one problem: I need a wife and I can’t find anyone willing to tie the knot with someone like me. Not after everything I’ve done. But my new maid is gorgeous and sexy as hell, and you know what? She’ll be perfect for the job... Note: part 1 of the series, for a mature audience only.
Grey (Book One)
Aundrea Ascencio - 2017
If black clothing, heavy metal music, and a general apathy toward humanity didn't turn Chantel off, then stalking was definitely a deal-breaker. Chantel's life was perfect before Eric shoved himself into it, and she is desperate to keep it that way. Eric couldn't agree more. Chantel is a risk he's never had the courage to take, and he's built a philosophy on staying away from "her kind". But staying away from her is harder than he counted on, and that is starting to become a problem. Or rather a beautiful disaster waiting to happen, when loving someone is a choice between who you really are and the person she makes you want to be. Grey is an interracial romance between a troubled Caucasian man who is involved in a white supremacist "brotherhood, and an African American woman, who is an honors student and obsessive perfectionist. The story follows the journey of accepting cultural differences, and learning to love for what's within, rather than for what's on the outside. It is also a story about coming of age as a young adult, and establishing one's self-identity in a world where stereotypes, racism, and prejudices warp the perceptions of other people, especially groups that are outside of mainstream American society. Against preexisting stereotypes, the characters fight for the right to define themselves, rather than accept how others choose to define them. This story is not just about race or romance, but raises social questions and values that everyone can relate to, no matter what cultural group they belong to.