âYouâre the setup and the story arc and the main character and the conflict and the punchline.â
Kayley Loring is one hilariously witty and entertaining author, and if you havenât discovered her rom comâs yet, then youâre missing out! Her wit, the banter between her characters, the warmth, swoon, and the heat are all trademarks of her stories which we crave and anticipate with every release.
The snarky humour in Funny Business gave us some giggles and the group text exchange (something Kayley Loring really excels at) was on point! And, after meeting Owenâs brothers, movie star Dylan and entertainment lawyer, Miles in Funny Business, we canât bloody wait for more of this series.
Two comedians walk into a barâŚWell, it didnât actually happen that way! More⌠ridiculously handsome stand-up comedian/model Owen Brodie delivering his set in Tampa, whilst a disgruntled Frances (Frankie) Hogan, heckles him from the back of the room. For some reason, this guy grates on her every nerve. Exactly why, is something to discover later in the story.
âIf we do this now, Iâm going to give you everything. Even if it doesnât last.â
Fast forward three years and their paths cross once again through Frankieâs Uncle Marty, who also happens to be Owenâs agent, arranges for Frankie to accompany Owen on his state-wide stand-up tour as Nanny to his sweet, laid-back seven-year-old son, Sam. Frankie is down on her luck, she has an instant rapport with little Sam and despite being aggravated by the charismatic Owen, she agrees to take the job. Besides, she and Owen can ignore the sexual chemistry, right? Right!!!
âYou have to stop looking at me like that.â
âLike what?â
âHot Guy Look.â
âIâm a hot guy. I canât not do this.â
Funny Business is packed with antagonistic banter, family bonding, and passionate trysts. Tender moments appear courtesy of Owenâs son Sam and their wonderful relationship. The serious, nap-loving red-headed Sam and his ever-joking Dad bounced off each other beautifully. As did Sam and Frankie.
âHeâs basically Garfield, but without the fur. Or the tail. Or four paws. Probably likes lasagne.â
We really enjoyed Funny Business. It provided many heart-warming and swoony moments! Our only niggle, as Danish/English and English/Australian readers, came from a personal bugbear. Itâs always going to be a punt for an author to hit the mark with our countryâs colloquialisms and whilst we understand the Aussie slang was written with exaggeration for laughs, it felt a tad over the top and outdated. The stand-up comedy routines also didnât quite work in text, but these were very small issues in an otherwise funny, sweet, sexy, and entertaining story!
âI want your everything, Frankie. Even if itâs just a bottomless pit of sarcasm and veiled dick jokes.â