First was "The Tortured Rake". Then, "The Reckless Playboy". This one is "The Restless Billionaire". Can I make it through all eight ridiculous titles?

First of all: the cover. It is just wrong, all wrong.
Book says: heroine is Bollywood movie star
Cover shows: blonde British babe
Book says: Hero is tall dark and incredibly handsome, rich as Croesus with a splintering green gaze.
Cover shows: short, slightly built dude who looks like a Bollywood movie star.
Book says: they meet in the penthouse of the uberluxurious Mumbai hotel owned by the Hero.
Cover shows: London Clock Tower.
Well, whatever. Onto the story.
....An hour and a half later...
Rats, it was just another one-night-stand-you-got-me-pregnant stories and the heroine was so wallpapery that if I was from Mumbai myself I might be offended. I mean, really, if you want to have the heroine be from another culture you can't just take Barbie and colour her skin, give her henna tattoos and call it a day. India has a
completely different culture folks, they aren't just exotic looking Brits.
Pffft.
Sebastian, at least, is a
bona fide Harlequin alpha/asshat Hero. He spends the whole book enacting his version of the "Come Here, Go Away" game. Of course, he doesn't actually deserve Aneesa but once he has his epiphany towards the end of the book (which was so run-of-the-mill that I've forgotten it already) he redeems himself.
Best part of the book? This author's version of the "meet cute". They lock eyes at her wedding, just as she's about to say her vows. Their kindred spirits recognize each other (the good ole Harlequin thunderbolt!) and she decides she can't go through with it and live a life without love! Her children having to live a lie! Fiance is gay, she's a beard but didn't know it until she caught him nekkid with his assistant, which made her throw up. She runs out of the room, into a service elevator and BAM! Up to the penthouse she goes. Runs to the balcony, encounters the Hero in his pool and asks him to make love to her, to make her henna tattoos have MEANING, dammit, before she succumbs to a life of pain and loneliness, never to love again. Allrighty then, he says, and quick as a wink has her horizontal.
2.5 stars, mostly because the only thing memorable about it was the wallpaper heroine.