The Color of Love cover

The Color of Love

Romance • Book 13

3.88 Goodreads
(724 ratings)

Why You'll Love This

A marriage of convenience between a reckless heiress and a woman with everything to lose sounds logical — until feelings make it anything but.

  • Great if you want: high-stakes romance with corporate power plays underneath
  • The experience: brisk and emotionally satisfying — reads fast, lands hard
  • The writing: Radclyffe keeps tension taut with clean, no-nonsense prose
  • Skip if: you're new to the series — prior context enriches the payoff

About This Book

When your visa is your lifeline and your job is on the line, love is the last complication you need. In The Color of Love, literary agent Emily May is navigating an impossible situation — no green card, a sister depending on her from Singapore, and a career she built from nothing suddenly at risk. Enter Derian Winfield, the family's rebellious heir dragged back into a corporate dynasty she's spent years outrunning. What unfolds is a marriage-of-convenience story that earns its emotional weight, because both characters have something genuinely fragile to protect. The stakes feel real, the vulnerabilities feel earned, and the tension between practicality and desire is exactly as complicated as it should be.

Radclyffe writes romance with a steady, confident hand — no breathless melodrama, no shortcuts. The pacing here is deliberate, the character work grounded, and the slow build between Emily and Derian rewards patient readers. This is the kind of book where the dynamic between two strong-willed women does the heavy lifting, and the chemistry develops through friction, negotiation, and quiet moments of recognition. Readers who prefer their romance layered with real emotional consequence will find this one satisfying long after the final page.