Reviews

Diary of a Bad Boy by Meghan Quinn

caseroo7's review

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4.0

I loved Roark and Sutton. The phone bit and Roark frustrated me a little bit, but this was still a great book. I love Meghan Quinn's stories and can't wait to read more from her!

bookboyfriendandhusbandmake3's review

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5.0

Another hit

Anonymous amazing hit by Meghan Quinn. I loved Roark and Sutton were great. Their banter had me laughing out loud several times and there were also some times that I had tears in my eyes.

chrissy3562's review

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5.0

I have to admit, I found our hero Roark to be a cocky @$$ at first. I didn't like him at the beginning of the book, but then we got to know him as he opened up to Sutton and I could see a bit of why he was the way he was. Sutton had far more patience with him than I would have, but she also found the love of her life in Roark. This book had moments that had me laughing so hard I almost spit out my drink. This story had the humor that I've come to expect form Meghan Quinn, along with the warm and fuzzies that you want from a romance. I enjoyed meeting Roark and Sutton's friends and would love to see them get their own books. I now need to go back and read Julia and Bram's story (we see a bit about them in this book). This book was great and I definitely recommend it.

adifferentreadingview's review

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4.0

Can’t believe this is over. Perfect amount of hilarity romance and steam. This is definitely a story I would reread. Loved the little snippets with bram and rath.

kellyyoungbl's review

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4.0

4 stars

This book was okay. Could have been way better if there was any drama or angst. There just wasn’t enough going on I think.

fictionallysam's review

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3.0


Well this was a time.

Diary Of A Bad Boy is a new enemies to lovers standalone romance from author Meghan Quinn that follows the relationship of Roark McCool and Sutton Green. After a mishap at a hot dog joint both Sutton and Roark’s phones get accidentally switched and Sutton gets a taste of Roark’s personality as she tries to get her phone back and vows to have nothing to do with him after the exchange…that is until she finds out that her father has paired her up with the one and only McCool for his charity event in Texas. Forced to work together both Sutton and Roark take a journey of self discovery and as they spend more time together and their relationship builds they both realize not everything is as it appears to be.

As Enemies to Lovers is one of my favorite tropes out there, I enjoyed reading this; I truly did. However, this isn’t my favorite book from Quinn. The beginning was a little off-kilter and somewhat hard to get invested into as the dialogue and situations didn’t feel authentic/realistic to me. But, as the story went on and we got further into the relationship of Roark and Sutton, and got to know them more and why they respond the way they do to situations, I found myself easily slipping into the storyline and even craving to read more of it.

The book is told through a mixture of mediums, text, diary entries, and our normal dual POV prose– which works really well for the story that is trying to be told once you get past the rocky beginning. I don’t think I connected with any one character, but instead what drew me in was the connection between them. I loved the relationship Roark has with Sutton’s Father and the journey that Roark took throughout the book to face his past and inner demons. I enjoyed reading Roark’s asshole personality and found it refreshing that it wasn’t a sudden switch of him becoming this good guy once the chemistry became undeniable between him and Sutton–instead his hot Irish Alpha ways remained but we got to see the tender moments of this good guy inside the hard exterior which made me appreciate them that much more.

I really was not vibing Sutton in the beginning as she was coming as this Mary-Sue character and overall angel that does no wrong–but just like with everything else in this book I was pleasantly shocked that she had a lot of hidden depth within her. With more layers being pulled back I started to understand why she is the way she is, and just exactly her real personality is like. I loved how Roark challenged her in both the best and worst ways possible and really pushed and furthered her character development like she did with him.

Overall I really enjoyed my time reading this even with the super rocky start. Roark and Sutton’s chemistry alone is something to stick it out for and I recommend this to anyone who enjoys an alpha romance with a huge dose of steamy enemy tension!

ARC provided by Inkslinger PR in exchange for my honest review. Quotations taken from an uncorrected proof and may change upon final publication. Graphics and Promotional used with permission from Inkslinger PR.

stumpfed's review

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5.0

Loved everything about it!

ellebeez's review

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4.0

Bad boy and good girl. This was sweet. I didn’t really get the quick flip to hating Roark to wanting him but it was still pretty good.

nicoll_apa's review

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4.0

Love it although sex scenes were placed weird, dont know how to explain it but they seemed off. Sutton it’s the kinda girl any woman can relate and Roark, damn! That guy had some shit on his soul. Love the end❤️
Now all I wanna do is read the next book. I’m wanting Rath’s book so bad! This ex of his sounds an interesting story!

jlbcasper's review

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5.0

Ok MQ, you got me again. Are the names ridiculous? Yes. Is this book too long? Kinda. Did I love Sutton Grace Green (yeah, that’s her name)? Absolutely. Perfect heroine, funny and smart and handled everything so well, excepting a certain restaurant fiasco that annoyed the crap out of me. Roark MCCOOL (smh) was adorable, a little stupid, but he more then made up for it in the end. Exactly what you would expect from the romcom queen, and I definitely recommend it.