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Ebook384 pages6 hours

Switch

Rating: 3 out of 5 stars

3/5

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About this ebook

don't think don't question just do

The anonymous note wasn't for me. Don't get me wrong, I'm not in the habit of reading other people's mail, but it was just a piece of paper with a few lines scrawled on it, clearly meant for the apartment upstairs. It looked so innocent, but decidedlydeliciouslyit was not.

Before replacing the noteand the ones that followedin its rightful slot, I devoured its contents: suggestions, instructions, commands. Each was more daring, more intricate and more arousing than the last...and I followed them all to the letter.

Before the notes, if a man had told me what to do, I'd have told him where to go. But submission is an art, and there's something oddly freeing about doing someone's bidding...especially when it feels so very, very good. But I find that the more I surrender, the more powerful I feelso it's time to switch up roles.

We play by my rules now.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 1, 2012
ISBN9781460300220
Unavailable
Switch
Author

Megan Hart

When she was in third grade, Megan Hart fell in love for the first time. Not with a boy (that would wait until fourth grade), but with a story. Homecoming by Ray Bradbury leaped out at her from the pages of a library book, and she tumbled head over heels. In the dark ages, before the days of photocopiers, the only way for her to keep a copy of this story was to copy it out by hand so she could read it over and over again. Something funny happened, though, as she carefully printed it on lined notebook paper. She made "improvements." At age twelve, reading Stephen King's The Stand for the first time one memorable summer, it occurred to her that people really did write books for a living. That's when she decided to become an author. Megan began writing short fantasy, horror and science fiction before graduating to novel-length romances. In 1998, now a stay-home mom, Megan took up writing in earnest, attending her first writing conference and getting her first request for a full manuscript. In 2002 she saw her first book in print, and she hasn't stopped since. She's published in almost every genre of romantic fiction, including historical, contemporary, romantic suspense, romantic comedy, futuristic, fantasy and perhaps most notably, erotic. She also writes non-erotic fantasy and science fiction, as well as continuing to occasionally dabble in horror. Megan's goal is to continue writing spicy, thrilling love stories with a twist. Her dream is to have a movie made of every one of her novels, starring herself as the heroine and Keanu Reeves as the hero. Megan lives in the deep, dark woods with her husband and two monsters...er...children. I love to hear from readers! Please contact me at: readinbed AT gmail DOT com

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Reviews for Switch

Rating: 3.221590917045454 out of 5 stars
3/5

88 ratings10 reviews

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  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    One word, awkward!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is the very first book I read by Megan Hart. It's been a one way love train ever since. I adore almost everything she writes. Anyway, I didn't feel this book was about sex or either of the main men in the story but about Paige. This book is how she learns herself and finally gets comfy in her own skin. I love that. There are of course a couple hot men along the way.

    The plot is solid and I love the character quirks that makes Paige seem real. I loved this book and have re-read it a few times.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    I got bored to tears by the opening of the story which was an info dump and the leading mentally masturbating over stationary. I like paper and pens, but this was page after page of detailed information on paper. She likes fancy types of paper, sealing waxy and calligraphy sets. I GET IT! I didn't need to beat over the head with this information and honestly she was such a vacuous, needy and painfully insecure character I flounced.

    Really, if you care that much about someone you hate that you spend that much time trying to find the 'perfect' present for them you have some serious issues and you need a therapist.

    I wish authors would realize that this level of insecurity isn't quirky, it's unhealthy at the least and severely disturbing at the most. Also, did I mention how boring it was?

    You shouldn't have to work this hard to give a crap about the characters and story.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I devoured this book. It was just so different but exciting and mysterious. So detailed. I feel badly for Eric but I did see what happened coming. I'm just not sure I'm thrilled with the ending. Not sure at all.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Paige has a new divorce and a new job. Misdirected notes start showing up in her apartment mailbox, and she reads them before passing them on to the right mailbox. The notes contain commands, some sexual and some not. Paige follows the commands even though they aren't meant for her and through doing so discovers things about herself. Meanwhile, she has a difficult boss she begins to understand, a handsome neighbor she may be falling for, and an ex-husband who seems to want back into her life.Meh. This fairly compelling premise fails to deliver because the story focuses in all the wrong places. The boss thread belonged in a different story (and probably a different kind of story) altogether--it always felt like it was taking me away from the real story and also never got the attention it needed to develop fully. Giving a romantic heroine two love interests (here, the neighbor and the ex) is always tricky because it risks readers liking the "wrong" one more than the one she ends up with (and you have to divide character development time between the two, thus potentially giving the development of one too little attention). In Switch, I absolutely was routing for the guy Paige doesn't end up with (and I felt really, really bad for him when she, realizing he is a sub to whom all those notes were addressed, "takes over" as his mistress without telling him (never mind how), and then, when she decides to get back with the ex, just drops him BY LETTER when he is expecting to meet his mistress in person for the first time. Consent issues aside--not that they can really be aside-- WT-everloving-F? Seriously?) Furthermore, I never warmed to Paige. In pretty much any other genre, this would not be a problem as long as she was interesting and did interesting things, but in a romance novel, it kind of takes the fun out of the whole thing. Flern.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Meh ... Paige is supposed to be approximately my age, and as I was reading I just kept thinking about how I could not relate to her at all. She couldn't make up her mind to save her life, and came off sounding very high on herself. The sexy scenes were borderline at best. No, wait ... I lied. I could totally relate to the paper/pen/office supply love. Other than that, meh.This was not my first Megan Hart book, so I didn't exactly go in expecting a masterpiece, but Switch was very disappointing.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I'm still chuckling over this book, and an snob about papers and pens myself I actually found thos parts of the book more arousing than the sex scenes. The story was well written though and I would definately buy this author again.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Very strange book. Found it hard to finish as it had too many plots going on
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    It seemed like the author was trying to shove too many stories into a single book. The writing was all over the place and most of it didn't make sense, even when she tried to wrap things all up. The last two chapters definitely had more plot in them than in the entire book. It was also a totally different direction than what it seemed she was going for. Very blah.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Strange story, not sure I quite understood what the author was really trying to say. Not sure I even liked Paige at all. Truly disappointing story I usually like Megan hart books!