A curvy businesswoman running a boudoir-photography studio must collaborate with a male rival for an unexpected project in this debut romance.
When her pregnant best friend, who’s launching a size-inclusive collection of lingerie for a larger brand, proposes that Black photographer Cassie Harris pose for the ad campaign instead of taking the pictures, she’s leery, especially if it means being photographed by the White male competitor who often edges her out for jobs. Reid Montgomery has skill, but he’s used to skating by on his charm and doing what clients expect, mimicking his personal life of casual ties courtesy of emotionally uninvolved parents and a ne’er-do-well sibling. The lucrative offer to feature Cassie in a lingerie shoot in which she’d get art director credit while Reid secretly ensures the parent company’s traditional vision offers a tempting opportunity for both of them. Despite their attraction, Cassie is wary of sharing top billing with someone who’s been in the way of her success before, while Reid worries about his secret deal with the lingerie company executives—and its inevitable revelation threatens to split apart their budding relationship, professional and erotic. Set in Chicago, which functions as a romantic backdrop to location-hunting and photo shoots, and with a multiracial and queer supporting cast, this debut has a lot of promise. Cassie’s background as the artistic child of high-achieving and wealthy parents challenges racial stereotypes, as does Reid’s history of being a popular photographer from a dysfunctional home who’s slow to recognize his racial privilege. The infodumping about their lives and the heavy-handedness of Cassie’s having to explain why it’s hard to be a Black entrepreneur and artist are balanced out by scenes of sexual chemistry between the leads and affection between Cassie and her circle of friends and co-workers. While the crisis precipitated by Reid's hidden agenda is telegraphed almost from the start, it’s a structural weakness that is resolved effectively by his eventual big gesture.
Questions of race, class, and sexism test the possibility of a happy-ever-after in this interracial romance.