A review by _youfloweryoufeast_
The Takeover Effect by Nisha Sharma

5.0

5 salacious ⭐️

Genre: Romance
Age group : Adult
POV : Third person
Characters: 5/5 ⭐️
Plot: 5/5 ⭐️
Setting/Themes: 5/5 ⭐️
Writing: 5/5 ⭐️

• Please check TWs & CWs
• mature language, sexual scenes, death of a parent, drugs, substance abuse, alcoholism

“Main tuhadi sari zindagi nu pyar karan di udika kara riha hum”

OH MY GOD. OH MY GOD. OH MH GOD. I LOVED THIS SO MUCH, PLEASE I THINK I MIGHT COMBUST. ISTG. First off, I’ve always loved the corporate world, the wealth, the manipulation, the luxury, the drama. This book, servedddd. It wasn’t a lot mainly because this book involved lots of the introduction to the Singh Brothers’ world and that’s understandable. Throw in a bunch of desi heroes and heroines, with FOOD?! YES PLEASE. I’ve always loved the idea of rich dominant men and badass intelligent women, the fact that they’re Desi just makes it so so so much better. The plot? Super intriguing, super fun to read.

Mina Kohli. Strong, badass, independent and intelligent. It goes without a doubt that I loved Mina. Not only is she independent and intelligent, but she’s a NO BS girl and dosent take orders from men. Did I Also mention that she’s tall and never once has she been ashamed of her heels? Super inspiring, really. The way she handled things at Bharat was so intriguing, watching this wonderful and smart woman at work? I’d marry the hell out of her.

Hemdeep Singh. Rich, powerful, intelligent. Both him and Mina make a great pair really. Hemdeep is quite the man, with his own firm and success. What I loved most about him is that he didn’t even hesitate to come back for his family, I loved this among other things. He wasn’t an Alpha asshole either. Think alpha gentleman. He gave Mina the space, made sure she was comfortable, asked her if she was okay with things, pushed when he knew Mina needed to be pushed. To find that kind of understanding in a man is rare. Hem, is one of a kind.

I loved the Singh brothers’ bond. I loved the way the moved as a unit, the way they joked around with each other. I loved that they had each other’s backs. I also loved the familial values in the book, it genuinely does mean a lot. Among these, I have to speak up about the cultural representation. Nisha Sharma is brilliant and I can’t wait to read more of her books. Enjoyable and intriguing read, PICK IT UP, righHT NOWW !!