*A limited collector's bundle of 5 individual titles (not boxed) with illustrated covers and blue sprayed edges on the first print run.*
New York Times bestselling author Elle Kennedy returns to Briar University in these hot and hilarious spinoffs of the Off-Campus series. Favorite hockey players return and get the chance for their own happily-ever-afters with the smart and sassy women who win their hearts.
The Chase
Everyone says opposites attract. And they must be right, because there's no logical reason why Summer DiLaurentis is so drawn to tattoo-covered, video-gaming, hockey-playing Colin Fitzgerald. It doesn't help that she just moved in with him. Fitzy made it clear he's not interested, and Summer isn't the type to chase a man--but the sparks between them might still burn their house down.
The Risk
Brenna Jensen might be known as the "bad girl," but as the daughter of Briar U's head hockey coach, she draws the line at sleeping with the enemy. And that's who Jake Connelly is. Harvard's star forward is arrogant, annoying, and too attractive for his own good. But fate is cruel--Brenna needs Connelly to be her fake boyfriend, and for every fake date, he wants a real one. And she can't risk falling for him.
The Play
After last year's distractions cost his hockey team their season, captain Hunter Davenport has a new philosophy: hockey and school now, women later. He's going celibate. But there's nothing in the rulebook that says he can't be friends with gorgeous Demi Davis. She even has a boyfriend. Except three months into their friendship, Demi is single and looking for a rebound...and she's making a play for Hunter.
The Dare
College is finally Taylor Marsh's chance to get over her ugly-duckling complex, and when her Kappa Chi sisters issue a challenge, she can't say no. The dare: seduce hockey-playing hottie Conor Edwards. She expects him to laugh in her face, but instead, he lets Taylor take him upstairs to pretend they're getting busy. What's more? He wants to keep pretending. But the longer this ruse goes on, the less of a game it seems.