Wild Love by Elsie Silver
Wild Love by Elsie Silver is the first book in the Rose Hill series. The series follows four single dads in a small lake town. The first is Ford Grant, a cute and shy billionaire in love with his best friend’s sister, Rosie.
Wild Love by Elsie Silver Summary:
She’s been driving him wild for years . . . the good kind of wild.
The kind of wild that comes with wanting your best friend’s little sister and knowing you can’t have her.
Forbes may have labeled Ford Grant the World’s Hottest Billionaire, but all he cares about is escaping the press and opening a recording studio in gorgeous small town Rose Hill. Something that comes to a screeching halt when he ends up face-to-face with a young girl who claims he’s her biological father. Now, he spends his days balancing business with parenting a sullen twelve-year-old, all while trying desperately to keep his hands the hell off his best friend’s sister, Rosie Belmont.
After living in the city, Rosie came blasting back into town like a storm. Beautiful, messy, and chaotic. And one wide-eyed, desperate plea for a job is all it takes for Ford to hire her. He vows to keep her at arm’s length. Tries to stick to scowls and grumpy one-liners. But with her, verbal sparring is a type of foreplay―friction that soon turns to blistering heat.
Ford knows damn well he shouldn’t cross this line. But shouldn’t and can’t are two very different things.
And the only thing he truly can’t do is resist her.
Wild Love: Review
Ford used to spend his breaks in Rose Hill, a small lake town in the Rocky Mountains. A self-made billionaire decides to move to this small town and open a music studio. His best friend, West, is helping him move and adjust to the community. Before he unpacked the first box, eleven-year-old Cora showed up. It turns out that Ford is a father, and his daughter needs a huge favor.
Rosie is in a tough spot in her life. Her relationship is falling apart, and after being assaulted at work, she got fired. Understandably, she is bitter and confused. The only thing she wants to do is to come home and figure out her next move. Since she finds peace in her hometown, she decides to find a job. And Ford is here to help her.
Rosie and Ford have an intriguing relationship. They thrive on provoking each other. And sometimes, this went too far for my taste. Especially when it comes to Rosie, I generally liked her character; she was a bit like Willa, Ford’s sister from Chestnut Springs series. However, there were times when she irritated me.
Ford is a sweetheart. He would go above and beyond to show people how much they mean to him, especially Rosie and Cora. My favorite part of the book is that relationship. Ford and Cora are quiet characters, and Rosie is there to help them to be more open.
Read if you like:
- Small-town single dad romance
- Workplace romance
- Childhood friends to lovers