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What does a 35 year old, plus-sized virgin do when she decides to lose her virginity and experience just one night of being desirable? She lets herself get talked into hiring a male escort. Unfortunately, mistaken identity lands her in the bed of a hunky doctor, and now things are spiralling out of control!

118 pages, Kindle Edition

First published May 11, 2011

73 people are currently reading
1572 people want to read

About the author

Angela Verdenius

66 books678 followers
I am a mixture of things - full-time worker, cat owner, writer, bookworm, supernatural horror movie buff, mystery series fan, and daydreamer.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 150 reviews
Profile Image for Cassie.
Author 3 books3 followers
October 26, 2012
I finished Doctor’s Delight (Big Girls Lovin’) last night and wanted to get the review in while the story was still fresh in my mind. So we’ll jump right into the plot summary then I’ll give you my unbiased opinion…well, probably biased cause I’m all for plus sized romances!

We have an extremely insecure 35 year old plus sized woman, Cherry, who has never made love with a man before. She’s lonely and longs for human contact (with a male-type person, of course, and 35 years of celibacy will do that to a girl), so she takes some advice from her friend and hires a male escort. 400 pounds (this book is NOT based in the US) for 2 hours of service. Roughly around $600 us dollars I believe, I could be wrong, was never good at conversion. She chooses her date, and goes to the hotel where she has second doubts the entire time, one a man has never seen her without clothing (she’s a nurse, she’s seen ton of naked people) and two she worries what he will think of her.

Being a plus sized girl myself, I completely get this reasoning, there is always that moment of OMG before you take your clothes off. I believe ALL women go through this though, not just plus sized girls. There is always that voice in the back of your head that starts a list of all your flaws.

So a man arrives at her door, she assumes he’s the male escort and they have hot, first time sex. Which is fine and dandy, but I remember mine as being awkward and messy, but again this IS a romance novel so it was perfect. :)

The man is NOT he escort, he is actually a new, single Dr in town who was a little tipsy and mistook her room for his and thought she was a gift from a friend. (I need to move to a country where my plus sized self is considered a GIFT!)

Okay, so of course he finds out who she is in real life after he pay and dash, and love explodes, so does hot sex. Everywhere.

There are things I love about this book, and some things I didn’t particularly like. You will read a lot of reviews regarding how irritating the heroine Cherry is with her insecurities. Which tells me one of two things, either the people reading this book have perfect self-esteems or they were extremely popular during school. I understand EXACTLY what she feels, and how it can damage you for years. Taunts and belittling in school can damage the one sees themselves for the rest of their life. Being called Whale Blubber will do that to you, and she still gets taunted by some mean women in the book. It’s just something I don’t find annoying in her at all, if I were in the situation, sorry to say, fists would start flying. I know violence never solves anything, but she was tortured and just lowered her head and walked on. I was happy to see her get a backbone by the end of the book and start standing up for herself.

Cherry is a very sweet character, who doesn’t think bad about anyone, and has serious doubts regarding Rick’s commitment or his tastes. He’s an extremely hot doctor and she’s a 35 year old virgin. You don’t get to be a 35 year old virgin without having a promise ring or serious hangups.

Rick (the doctor!) LOVES plus sized girls, he talks about her softness a lot, which is pretty cool, and follows her around like a lost puppy so he definitely has the hots for her. He has to battle through her hangups to get her to understand his love and devotion to her.

So yes, I enjoyed the book, the downers was that some of it brought back bad child hood memories for me as a plus sized girl, but it made me love and root for Cherry even more because I saw myself in her. So to any naysayers…there are men who think girls with a little more are worth a lot more. I recommend this book highly, but be prepared for the swamp that comes with the memories if you were ever teased as a child.
Profile Image for Yalda CM.
231 reviews4 followers
May 1, 2013
Loved this book!!! I think we should all act like Cherry did in the end, you know? Just stand up for yourself and never let people bring you down!!!

description

Fat, flat or fab, whatever shape, color or race, we all are gorgeous and pretty and freaking amazing!!! We all have to do is just love ourselves a tiny bit more...believe me, i'm talking from experience.

Gonna read the whole serie now :D Cop's Passion ....HERE I COME!!!

PS: Please read THIS if ur big and curvy and incredibly beautiful, like me :D
Profile Image for Sylwia.
1,323 reviews26 followers
January 20, 2018
Thoughts after second read::
Let this be a lesson to us all that if you have a feeling you should DNF something, go with that feeling. The book is not going to get better. I'm lowering this from 2 stars to 1 star.

The love interest exhibited abusive and controlling behaviors (stalking, barging into her home, refusing to leave, refusing to take "no" for an answer multiple times, coercing the protagonist to do things she's uncomfortable with at his pace, etc.). The author sexualized male ownership of women. The author normalized cisheteronormativity. Our fat protagonist hates her body throughout the book and only starts to be mildly okay with it because her love interest likes it. This book is unhealthy with terrible representation, not to mention that the narrative and character's thoughts are all unbelievable. The only positive things about this novel are that the protagonist is fat and the emphasis on the importance of Cherry's friends (however I could not tell her friends apart and none of the information about them stuck). I do not recommend. The quest for fat positivity continues!

Thoughts upon first reading attempt:
Dropping in the middle of chapter two. The author isn’t doing anything to make me believe that this is how actual people think and behave. I’m disappointed, since I’m on the hunt for any books with positive portrayals of fat women. In the beginning of this, our fat protagonist hates her body. Also, “virginity” is discussed as if it’s a concept that matters. I’m giving it two stars instead of one only because I appreciate that it exists, even if it’s not well-written.
Profile Image for Preeti ♥︎ Her Bookshelves.
1,462 reviews18 followers
March 21, 2021
A Cinderella-ish dream come true story for a plus sized (or any sized, for that matter) virgin who finally takes her fate in hand and decides it's high time she does something about her V-status. Her bffs push her to pay to deal with her pesky hymen.
The shy h dolls up for a date with the escort, instead a drunk but hunky and handsome doctor enters the wrong room, a midnight meet cute thanks to a mix-up and sweet-sexxy times.
The h runs in the morning. The doc is smitten by the sweet, soft armful and then finds her hiding in plain sight - she's a nurse in his hospital. The revelation was funny - the escort who was in an accident and the nurse and the doctor in the same room!
The doc pursues, the h hedges as her self-doubts rear up, a troublemaking of-course-skinny ow creates trouble. Bffs on both sides are great.

I enjoyed this simple, sweet fare. What's not to like?
Profile Image for Rose May.
106 reviews1 follower
November 20, 2011
Note: This review, and all my reviews, comes from my blog - Romantic Rose's Bookshelf (http://romantic-rosesblog.blogspot.com). Thank you to Ms. Verdenius for the book to review!

Book 1 in the Big Girl’s Lovin’ series

Cherry is getting older and she’s still a virgin. Getting desperate to have her ‘cherry popped’ she contacts Helen at the escort agency, and arranges for a man to meet her at a hotel room. She meets the man there, has wonderful, blow-your-mind sex with him, then pays and leaves while he sleeps. The next day she gets a call from the escort agency saying the man, Damien, got into an accident and couldn’t meet her last night, explaining how sorry the agency is. So who did Cherry have sex with? She finds out when she heads to work (she’s a nurse) and sees the new doctor, Rick Reed. Looks like things at work are about to heat up…

I’d like to start off by saying I really liked the heroine of this story. Cherry is a plus-sized heroine with plus-sized fears and insecurities. I myself am thin, I’ve always been thin, and it’s very likely I will remain thin. I’ve never had to worry about my size, or see models way, way thinner than me prancing about in bras and panties as the only definition of sexy. I felt bad for Cherry because I could realistically see why she was so insecure, and consequently it made the story of her discovering her own self-worth very moving. It was a great idea to pick a plus-sized heroine, because it’s original. A great idea with good execution. Well done, Verdenius!

However, there were some things that dimmed my enjoyment of the story. First, our hero was a bit of a cad. Rick comes off as domineering, crude, and way too forward for my tastes. While I liked how good he was to Cherry at the beginning of the novel, he was kind of an inconsiderate brute. A jerk. A dick. I didn’t like him. And my like for him didn’t grow exponentially throughout the novel, so I ended up with an overall sense of ‘meh’-ness as far as his character was concerned.

The story was a little cliché and moved pretty slowly, but it wasn’t unbearable or completely uninteresting – but it wasn’t a book I was wholly unable to put down and therefore is best read in a few sittings. There was a lot of humor interjected, though the syntax was a little awkward in places. Other than Cherry who was multi-layered and well-developed, the rest of the characters were static, flat, and stereotypical – down to the bitchy, thin girl, the evil teenage boys and the crazy BFFs. I might be wrong in saying this, but I don’t hear that many people making fun of the fat girls at my school, or indeed the fat girls at the pool at my local YMCA. The sheer number of torments Cherry went through seemed a little unrealistic to me, as did Annabelle’s (the skinny bitch) character. Not all of us pretty, skinny gals are bitches; and some fat, pretty or fat ugly women can be. See the stereotype?

Overall, what I had hoped this book would do is not villianize the pretty, skinny, or the fat. While society tends to villianize the fat, this book took a stab at the skinny and I didn’t like that. What I’d hoped was that people of all body types could be embraced in Verdenius’s book, and instead it seemed only the fat were acceptable (especially because such a big deal was made over Annabelle’s size). The prose and dialogue were nothing exceptional and the plot was a little slow, and as already discussed there were problems with the syntax. I did appreciate the humor and Cherry’s character, as well as the uniqueness of the book, but overall it really hit a few nerves with me due to its hypocrisy.

There were a number of demeaning comments made in regards to a skinny woman’s figure that sounded more like spite than anything else. And much as I hate to say this – just like some people can’t help being absurdly fat, some people can’t help being absurdly skinny. There’s a medical condition called hyperthyroidism that can cause women (or men) to end up looking a little like sticks with a lollipop head. You really just can’t eat enough. And some women are simply skinny because they want to be - and that's not bad, just like being fat isn't bad. I wished the book had been universally accepting of figure instead of pinging on the skinny in an effort to make the fat seem better. That’s just as bad as what society does now.

Still, it’s an enjoyable story about a plus-size woman getting her hot, dreamy doctor and I would encourage anyone who enjoys plus-size heroines or who may have some of their own insecurities (like Cherry) to read this book.

You are beautiful.

“Sexy”ness rating: WHEW!

Overall Rating: C+

Bottom Line: A good heroine, an ‘eh’ hero, some definite hypocrisy, good humor, awkward syntax, average plot and dialogue, a little slow on pace, unique ideas… did I cover it all?
Profile Image for Jess the Romanceaholic.
1,033 reviews491 followers
May 23, 2011
This is a Quickie Review. For the full review, please visit The Romanceaholic.

Expected Release Date: Available Now!
Publisher: Self-Published
Imprint: N/A
Author’s Website: http://www.angelaverdenius.com/
My Source for This Book: Gift from the Author
Part of a Series: Yes, Book 1, Big Girls Lovin’
Series Best Read In Order: N/A
Steam Level: Hot


When the author approached me about this book, I knew from the moment that I read the blurb that I was going to love it, and I was right.

Cherry, a nurse in a private hospital, has always been uncomfortable with her figure. A voluptuous woman, all she can see when she looks in the mirror is that her many generous curves don’t match up with all the other slim things she sees in the media, nor with the skinny misses she always sees getting their man. To make matters worse, men always see her as “one of the guys” — always a friend, but not actually girlfriend material.

Now 35, an incredibly frank discussion with her two best (and slim) friends leads her to make a move that she’d never in a million years pictured herself doing — hiring a male prostitute to take her virginity before she’s too old to enjoy herself.

One painfully embarrassing phone call later, and she has everything scheduled — she’s to meet Damien under an assumed name at a local hotel, at the bargain rate of $400 for two hours of entertainment.

Rick has just moved into town as a new doctor, about to begin his practice at the same hospital that Cherry works at. On the fateful night that Cherry is scheduled to meet with Damien, Rick has a few too many drinks at the bar and his friend Tim tells him that there is a little surprise for him back in his hotel room. When he reaches his room, he’s thrilled to find Cherry, and thinking that she is the surprise that Tim mentioned, he enthusiastically partakes of everything Cherry has to offer. Afterwards, he falls asleep holding her, and she quietly slips away, leaving payment in his wallet.

It’s not until the next morning when Cherry receives a phone call at her home from the escort service apologizing for Damien having not shown up the previous night, and Rick wakes up and realizes that he’s in the wrong hotel room, that they both realize that there’s been a huge mix-up, and while Rick is desperate to find the rubenesque goddess who completely rocked his world the night before, Cherry wants nothing more than to pretend the whole thing never happened and put the whole humiliating thing behind her.

Of course, once they return to work…

Since there was an issue for me about some of the wording and language used, I do want to remind readers that the author is Australian and that there is a definite language difference between Australian English and American English. I’ll let you battle it out over which one is better or more pure or whatever, but both of my issues with the language very likely stemmed from the difference in our location.

Overall, though, it was a very enjoyable story. Rick was a bit too arrogant for my tastes, and Cherry really did have some deep seated body issues, but I think they balanced each other very nicely. I liked that Rick was so incredibly attracted to Cherry, and not just for her voluptuous figure, and that he was the one chasing her. While some of the comments from people around Cherry seemed a little outlandish — I’ve never had any of the sort of comments that Cherry had to endure, though I do live in a smaller city than she does — I absolutely loved how Rick would stand up for her, and how she finally managed to stand up for herself which was a very big accomplishment for her.

Recommended for fans of heroines dealing with very real issues of not living up to society’s standard, heroes who think that real women have curves, and a sweet and spicy love story.

A very solid 4/5 Stars
Profile Image for PointyEars42.
753 reviews49 followers
September 9, 2012
Abandoning this dreadful book at 45%. It was okay up until about 5% in... okay in that I was going to continue reading despite the author’s habit of using the most obvious or clichéd turn of phrase in any given situation. A page later I was irritated. A chapter later I was furious.

I cannot stand those creepers who think that wearing you down is an option; who think that women are grateful for any attention so if they become enough of a nuisance you’ll give them what they want... or that you’ll buckle under pressure or fear or embarrassment and give in just to shut you up. The only thing I hate more than those guys are the insecure, desperate, timid women who let them get away with it. They are so terrified of being alone or hurting a guy’s feelings that they choose to think that persistence is the same thing as being stalked.

I see enough of that in real life that I certainly don’t want to see it in my fiction... and the hell do I want to see it romanticised.



I regret giving this book a chance after reading book 3 and thinking the series had some potential.
Profile Image for Chumchum_88.
556 reviews45 followers
November 28, 2016
I loved it, it was my first book for a plus-sized girl and I really liked it.

- Loved the hero, he was soooooo cute when he was with her, and in other reviews I read someone described him like a puppy following her around, which is true, and do you know what other thing is true about him, him being a potential stalker XD I'm glad that he got through t the heroine and they got together, otherwise I don't know what he would have done, cause seriously he was really persistent for someone who met her only by coincidence before and had sex with her only once. Which I have to admit is sweet in a weird sort of way, not the stalkery kind but the really care about you and drool after you kind.

- The heroine was cute, not my first with a virgin hooking up with a male escort ends up with another guy scenario but it was really cute, right after when she realized who that stranger was. I understood her fears and hesitation on everything, I admit I'm a medium sized girl but believe I know people who keeps mouthing fatty to my face daily, s I understood the heroine and I didn't get annoyed at her hesitation, as a matter of fact I think she was really brave, opening up to him bit by bit, and trusting him with her inner most constant fears.

- I liked how cheeky the hero got around her, his insinuations were so obvious and some were cheesy but still cute.

- Liked how they were at the party at the end of the book, Loved Nancy and Tim, especially that gay conversation XD

- Liked how the heroine friends stick up for her, and have her back, especially that moment when they fought with the hero before they left for the party.

- Loved the fight scene at the end, and everything that came after.

- That bitch got what she deserves, especially the part were people saw her true colors. I really don't get it why is there people that mean, what's wrong with being nice to others? what kind of twisted satisfaction does those people get when they talk shit to others?
Overall, *thumbs up*


Profile Image for Audrey.
436 reviews96 followers
October 19, 2011
A good read, 3 to 3+ overall. Cherry is a massive bundle of insecurity and self-doubt due, in large part, to her plus-sized proportions, and Rick is the dreamy, perfect, and eternally patient hunk who sweeps onto the scene to sweep Cherry off her feet. For an erotic romance, I thought this story was sweet and entertaining, and there were some lively secondary characters thrown into the mix. I'm not rating it higher than a 3/good because that's what it is: a good, comfortable read with nothing ground-breaking or mind-blowing about it.

As I've come to expect with nearly everything I've read lately, there were some distracting editing errors (e.g., "titling her head up" rather than "TILTING her head up") that detracted from my reading experience. Seriously, though, am I just a perfectionist (I don't deny this possibility) or are writing standards just going down the tubes??? I feel I should start offering my admittedly OCD and law firm-trained proofreading skills out at a (modest, of course) rate.
Profile Image for Suzanne (Under the Covers Book blog).
1,746 reviews563 followers
July 17, 2013
Okay, forgive me for being super lazy, but I am going to review all the books in this trilogy in one review, this is to stop boring you with repetition as what I have to say about each book is pretty similar.

The trilogy goes in this order:
Doctor's Delight (Big Girls Lovin' Trilogy, #1) by Angela Verdenius Cop's Passion (Big Girls Lovin' Trilogy, #2) by Angela Verdenius Vet's Desire (Big Girls Lovin' Trilogy, #3) by Angela Verdenius

I normally reserve the first part of my review to give a general synopsis of the book, been as I doing a three in one deal I will give a general run down. In each book we have a heroine with body issues who unwittingly ensnares a hot man who then has the task of convincing his BBW heroine that he likes her just as she is.

I am in a BBW mood at the moment, I tend to go through phases so I have been lapping up Angela Verdenius like a fat chick let loose on a 6ft chocolate fountain. I feel safe saying this as I am that fat chick and if I was ever let loose on a 6ft chocolate fountain...then beware, I would suck that thing dry.

Anyways, back to the books, I enjoyed each one, they had their emotional moments, their sexy moments and their funny moments. Each of the heroines were likable and relatable for anyone who has few body issues, especially with those of us who have more "love" handles than a bike shop has regular ones.

But, the books themselves didn't really differ, the heroes, heroines and plot line were exactly the same in each book, as was the language. Ms Verdenius has her favourite words and they are used with frequency in each and every book.

This was an enjoyable trilogy though, I did enjoy each book and have a soft spot for Mike from Cop's Passion and I am going to continue my BBW obsession and read some more Angela Verdenius books.
Profile Image for Chu.
1,459 reviews72 followers
November 20, 2012
Love this series!!! You can't measure someone's beauty in terms of their size. It doesn't matter if your dress size is double digit: you can still be beautiful and someone out there can see it as well.
Profile Image for Sara.
34 reviews4 followers
September 22, 2020
I DNF. Where to start. I got such an ick feeling while reading this. One, why does she hate herself so much? He defines her as curvy and womanly and rubenesque. Yet, the author makes her out to be like 600+ pounds with an extra nose and a beard or something the way people mock her in the streets ( which honestly wouldn't happen.) He says multiple times he likes curves but then says, I don't care what you look like on the outside. I'm 185lbs and 5'3. I'm probably the size the woman in the book is, or around that. And no random person walking passed me has ever made fun of my weight. That's not reality. and to do it multiple times is just weird. My husband (who I've been married to for 15 years and I've always been curvy and he's been into me) likes curves. He's into that body type. He wouldn't even think to say " It's not what you look like on the outside" as an argument to her weight. He would just say, I find you hot, attractive, gorgeous, etc...
Then the way she wrote the romantic lead, ick. He was controlling (and I like some Doms) but not in a good way or a way that made any sense what so ever. He was just a jerk. And it was a forced storyline that had no where to go. It was fake created tension. And she was a wet noodle.
Maybe this book turns around after the 50% mark, but there are too many great stories that are based in reality about women who are plus sized, curvy, voluptuously, etc... for me to read.
Profile Image for Anna D..
506 reviews
May 24, 2013
I found Cherry endearing and Rick incredibly sweet..

Full review:
This story is as farfetched as the movie Pretty Woman – that there is a HEA after one of the MCs decides to hire an escort. Not bloody likely, but it does make for sweet romance reading.

Rick is, of course, the perfect man. He was raised right, taught to love a person for who they are and not what they look like. He’s also smart, rich, funny, a doctor, gorgeous, sensitive, and horny…the list goes on and on.

Cherry is simply a good person – she’s kind, works hard, compassionate and will always do what is right. She’s also on a large side, which has done a number on her confidence and self-esteem. Most of the book is Rick and Cherry’s friends, Susie and Maxie, trying to convince Cherry that she deserves good things and to not base her self-worth on her size.

Of course we have the slim and pretty villain, Annabelle, who is after Rick. We’re lead to the pivotal scene where Annabelle tries to knock down Cherry with very harsh words and Cherry will either run scared or finally stand up for herself. There are no real surprises in this book, but that’s ok. I actually like that about this book/series. There are plenty of sweet, sexy, and funny moments to keep your interest. I would recommend this book if you’re looking for a light, feel good read and if you like the “bigger girl/sexy boy” theme.
Profile Image for Kim.
835 reviews4 followers
August 15, 2013
This was just not for me. It wasn't the heroine's body issues that bothered me - those are pretty real. It was the rest of it. A nurse has sex with a man she really doesn't know for the second time and he doesn't use a condom and her response is to take the morning after pill and say "no worries." Uh... Get tested for STD's dumbass! You work in a hospital. Don't you see the consequences of this type of behavior pretty frequently? And the hero is just creepy. He's a doctor and we're supposed to think he's great, but his sexual innuendo and such is just creepy. There was also nothing surprising about this story - no new twists except Cinderella is fat and Prince Charming is creepy. I really wanted to like this. I saw it recommended a few places, but it's not for me.
Profile Image for Gabby.
439 reviews
June 3, 2013
I expected better from Ms. Verdenius, since Call On Me was really good, but this one is sappy, too sweet, and pretty fairy-tale-meets-erotica-wannabe.

I'm reading the entire trilogy, just ... because I want to know if Call On Me (The Mackay Sisters #1) by Angela Verdenius was a good shot or her writing gets better and better.
Profile Image for Sheila.
307 reviews29 followers
March 28, 2017
Me he sentido totalmente identificada con Cherry, con sus miedos e inquietudes. Ya solo por eso he disfrutado bastante.
Rick es el típico protagonista de novela romántica, a lo mejor un poco más pervertido que la media pero adorable y totalmente achuchable.
Profile Image for Ruth.
594 reviews72 followers
January 5, 2012
When I picked up this one I was really in need of some total fluff, but with some wit on the side. Well, this delivered!

I gave it 3 stars because I "liked it", but let me qualify that a bit - this isn't a life-changing read, and it's not the best-written, but it delivered that saccharine-flavored, make-me-happy-for-a-couple-of-hours feeling that I wanted at the time.

There were a couple of things that bothered me. First, check out that dreadful cover. OK, the top half is pretty lickable, but the bottom half is just dire. What on earth did they make that poor cover model wear? The whole point is that the heroine is a va-va-voom sexy but sweet woman, but they've put her into a giant, pink condom, which makes her just look like a smiling fat girl wearing an uncomfortable outfit!!

Secondly, this book is really about a heroine with a weight problem, who can't get over it, with a rather fabulous romance on the side. The romance bit was great (see below), but the heroine was 35, an age more-or-less when I thought most people (myself included, so I know whence I speak) learn to accept who and what they are, and put away the insecurities that others place onto you. I found it painfully sad that this heroine hadn't done that by 35. Maybe that was the point (OK, so I know that it was), but it too long coming and took too long to resolve. I'm stunned the hero stuck around as long as he did, even thought the heroine was a sweetie.

But, apart from those two gripes, there were some things I LOVED about this one. The hero was just fabulous - who wouldn't want Dr. Hunky to come over and give some personal treatment? The heroine was also good, and apart from the weight thing getting stale about halfway through, accurately described women's insecurities about their bodies, and how it can overtake their self-image. Their romance was very believable and how it started was slightly off-center, but incredibly well-written, funny and credible (as far as any romance is credible...).

Also, for the first time that I can remember, I actually like the heroine's friends. I normally don't like the heroine's friends taking up any wordcount in the romances I read, because they generally don't resemble anything I could recognize as a friend. They are too pushy, or too nice, or too shallow, or too perfect, or too flippin' nosy, but these two friends got it absolutely right. They are flawed, rude and a lot of fun, and, THEY DON'T IRRITATE ME!

But most of all, I love, love, love the saucy writing. The syntax is different than American Smut, but it was liberating to read some Aussie Smut, which actually bore more than a passing resemblance to British Smut. It was witty, light, caustic, funny, and so, so true.

Finally, it's actually rather nice to have a heroine who is on the plump side in a romance which isn't a menage or BDSM (don't ask me why, but the romances with the more rounded heroines do tend to occupy those sub-genres, which I've never understood), and although I hate the name of the trilogy ("Big Girls Lovin'"? Oh man, that is so awful) and the cover, I did really enjoy this nice little read.

3 stars.
Profile Image for Riya ❤️.
211 reviews8 followers
March 28, 2022
Better than what I expected but in the middle of the book I started expecting more which left me disappointed.

PS: This book only teases medical play but never features it. The characters are lovely but the last scene where Cherry confronts the vamp feels too forced and overly dramatic. I love Cherry and can 100% relate to her insecurities.
Profile Image for Nutnut1(Lornajean Ford).
1,063 reviews2 followers
April 16, 2013
This was my first introduction to this author and i am glad i took a chance it was beautiful written you could feel Cherry's dilemma and her insecurities,hell i have had most of them and i think thats why this book was special to me. I loved that Rick wanted her and made time to make her feel special. I wont say anymore as not to spoil it for anyone but i enjoyed it do much i had made a bet with a few friends at work buy it and if you really dont enjoy it i will give you back you money. And i have yet to shell out any money. Yeah go Angela x
Profile Image for namericanwordcat.
2,440 reviews439 followers
January 17, 2015
This is a fun wrong bed read set in Australia between a big beautiful nurse and a non jerky doctor. I have always loved this writers Science Fiction Romance series and was excited to see this contemporary series. I love books about heros who love curvy heroines. This is a good but but Cherry's self esteem issues as the main conflict are not so fun. I wish more books were written with large size women who have a good body image.

Profile Image for Claudia.
18 reviews
July 13, 2012
I really loved it. I don't want to say much about the story itself. I liked the message, somwhere out there there's somebody waiting for you. It doesn't matter what you look like and beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Which girl doesn't like that thought?! This book is perfect for a rainy lazy day, it warms your heart and makes you smile.
Profile Image for Margaret Perez.
27 reviews
December 29, 2020
Fun read

I liked the fact that it showed the tormented mind of someone who has tolerated verbal abuse from the stigma of obesity. The American population has over a 60% population that is overweight in some capacity. No one is perfect. And no one has the right to point a finger. The characters were fun and story well done.
Profile Image for L.
284 reviews1 follower
December 6, 2011
This was a cute, fun, funny read. Loved both the guy and the girl. And it was nice to have a plus size lead and a guy who adored her just as she was! Looking forward to the next two in the series.
Profile Image for Janey.
478 reviews22 followers
May 16, 2014
Aah... What a sweet and lovely book, yay the chubby girl gets the hottie!, go Cherry!, bout time too...,I liked that you got a glimpse of the next two stories, Tim the vets next so definitely going to read that one.
Profile Image for Kimberly Walter.
1,638 reviews15 followers
January 9, 2012
I really love this book and the series. its funny, emotional, erotic, sexy and very good. feel connected to the characters especially the heroine. i recommend this book very much.
Profile Image for Leticia Isquerdo.
85 reviews7 followers
June 26, 2015
I always like Angela Verdenius's books. It's so cute and easy to read.
Profile Image for Karoline.
254 reviews1 follower
January 29, 2016
I loved this book! It was beyond sweet. This was the first I've read by this author and I'm diving into book two now!
Profile Image for Jazzysmum.
711 reviews9 followers
February 8, 2020
a reread and still enjoyable the second time around. Love the Aussie slang!! makes it so genuine.
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