book cover of The KING Review
 

The KING Review

(2026)
(The second book in the Hart series)
A novel by

 
 
He believed his ex when she told him he was dangerous.
She can’t think of anybody less likely to manipulate her.
Grant King is head of the psychology department at the prestigious University of Talan, overseeing cutting edge teaching and research on love, intimacy, and relationships.
Neve Hart is his student, and the younger sister of a colleague. Far too young for a guy like him, with a kid and the dad bod to match; too wild for the train car of baggage his ex-wife landed him with.
Neve Hart has always been the impulsive, emotionally volatile sister, consistently accused of both knowing exactly what she wants and having no idea. She’s not as smart and grounded as her older sister, famous set theorist and creator of the HART app.
But Neve knows she wants Grant King, so she sets him a challenge. He’s an expert in readable body language, so they’re only allowed to text. No body, no photos, no voice.
Until a voice note ‘for science’ turns into a phone call, a phone call turns into a video call, and a video call turns into crossed boundaries and a panicked message from the emergency room when Neve didn’t know who else to call.
As lines blur between Grant’s past and the future he wants with Neve, he finds himself battling to stay in his daughter’s life against an ex who will do anything to get full custody, even if it means taking him down entirely.

The KING Review is a slow burn, spicy STEM romance, perfect for fans of Ali Hazelwood. It is the second in the HART series of interconnected standalones. They are best read in order. This book is intended for adults only. Please check triggers before reading. A list of content warnings can be found within, and on the author’s website.


Genre: Romance

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