Reviewed by Laura F.
March 24, 2006
"...reads like a charming classic."
One of my favorite lines from page 10, "The devil will be wearing bunny slippers when I go out with the likes of Michael Sommers."
This one line seemed to set the tone for the book. Sweet and sassy, Inadmissible: Love reads like a charming classic.
When Danni Price offers herself up for auction, albiet somewhat unwillingly, along with a steak dinner, to help out the Literacy Foundation, she doesn't expect to be bought by Michael Sommers. He works for a rival law firm, and his father is the man she beat only a week ago in the biggest case of her career.
She doesn't expect to like Michael, but she does. She also doesn't expect to be his opposing counsel in a custody battle, but she is. Soon they're fighting it out in court, arguing a case that isn't all it appears to be, and getting a little too close to falling in love.
I liked the characters, and I liked the story, but most of all, I liked the book. There was just something about it that kept me glued until the end. The humor's there, a simple undercurrent that keeps the story lively. It's a quick read novel that left me with a smile.
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Book Description for Inadmissible: Love
Attorney Danni Price is climbing the corporate ladder by working hard, trying difficult cases, and winning. She doesn’t have time to fraternize with the enemy. And Michael Sommer is most definitely the enemy.
Unfortunately for her, when Michael outbid everyone for the steak dinner date with her at the Literacy Foundation Auction, she had no choice but to go. The week before, she’d won the biggest case of her career against Michael’s father, and now she was forced into a date with his son. Danni saw the bid as a way of revenge.
Michael, a third generation attorney, however, saw a beautiful woman with intelligence and wit. All he wanted was the steak dinner, a little company, and to donate some funds to a good cause.
When the two realize they are the opposing attorneys in one of the biggest custody battles in the state, they become both rivals and allies. The problem is that romance is inadmissible, and in the end what really matters is who gets custody of their hearts.

