Played

Played

Naima Simone

Enjoyment: Quality: Characters: Plot:

USA Today bestselling author Naima Simone heats up the page with intensity and wit in this romance between a pro hockey player and a firefighter, both struggling to move on from the past. Being a firefighter isn’t easy. Especially for a Black woman. Working with family helps a little. But when somebody from your company doesn’t come back from a call, it’s brutal—as in, “How’m I supposed to go on?” brutal. And one death took me to a really dark place. A year later, I’m at the Pirates’ hockey training facility. Just another day on the job. Until I find a charred journal. I look inside for the owner’s name, but the words on the page punch me in the gut. It’s like reading my own thoughts. Reliving my own pain. The journal belongs to Solomon Young, left-winger for the Pirates—a father and widower. When I return it, I’m racked with guilt for the invasion of privacy. The look Solomon gives me is cold as ice. But damn if that man isn’t hot as hell. Now he’s stuck in my brain. And fate seems intent on making us face off.


From the Forum

No posts yet

Kick off the convo with a theory, question, musing, or update

Recent Reviews

Your rating:

  • treesbookscandles
    Apr 02, 2025
    Enjoyment: Quality: Characters: Plot:

    0
    comments 0
    Reply
  • Apr 02, 2025
    Enjoyment: Quality: Characters: Plot:

    Vibes: widower hero, hockey romance, “it’s just a warm body”, love after loss

    Heat Index: 7/10

    Still grieving the loss of her professional and personal partner, firefighter Adina can’t resist opening the journal she finds after a fire at a hockey facility. The journal details the kind of loss she understands deeply–but when she brings it back to the owner, widower and star player Solomon, he’s furious that she got a glimpse at his innermost feelings. But as he realizes that Adina understands where he’s coming from better than anyone else, enmity gives way to bonding, which gives way to a fierce physical attraction… The question is, can either one risk falling in love again?

    Oof. Played is a unique take on the hockey romance subgenre (and not only because Solomon is the only Black hockey hero I’ve read thus far, and the book doesn’t shy away from how white the sport is). While the hockey is a part of it, the firefighting is no less so. It’s about two people who genuinely love their jobs, but have also let themselves lose who they are in it because they can’t face the reality of their new lives. It’s about falling in love out of understanding and pretending that it’s just physical. And it’s about the inevitable messiness that comes with falling for someone after losing another.

    This makes it sound super heavy–and I wouldn’t say it totally is? Like, there’s definitely some heavy stuff here, but overall the book is fun and sexy and dramatic. It just also takes the time to think deeply about its plot, and I appreciate that quite a bit.

    Quick Takes:

    –The thing I really enjoy about this book is that Adina and Solomon actually get each other from the jump, arguably before they even meet. However, they–especially Solomon–really fight that, which kind of makes it easier to pass it off as something physical. They don’t act on the physical too quickly (though I wouldn’t call this a slow burn either) but there’s this conscious effort by both of them to sort of focus on that because the other option is… what? Being in love? Perish the thought!

    –This is a single parent romance! Solomon is not only a widower, but the father of a young son. I’m very vocal about my iffiness re: kids in romance novels, but this one was done well in my opinion. First off, he actually reads like a child. Second, he’s definitely a big part of Solomon’s life, but a part of what the novel confronts is that Solomon has been leaning on his in-laws as coparents since his wife died (which is a super real thing, right?). This not only provides us with good plot and character stuff… it also ensures that we don’t have too much of the kid on the page. I know, I’m mercenary, but it’s smart writing!

    Still, Solomon being this really loving but imperfect father so worked for me (and Adina). I loved the way he was presented as totally affectionate and vocally loving towards his son. So many books focus on like, this daddy’s girl thing with single father heroes, and… I don’t know. We need more depictions of fathers who kiss and cuddle and dote on their little boys, right?

    –This novel actually tackles some hard stuff alongside the romance I’ll give readers a heads up and say that while it doesn’t venture into sexual assault territory, Adina does have to deal with some pretty serious sexual harassment at work. At points, I did think there was a LOT packed in here, but one thing I did appreciate was that there wasn’t this pretty “tied with a bow” resolution to everything. There are some very human issues confronted here, and the resolutions felt like… very humanly in progress.

    That said, I did kind of feel like the ending was a bit rushed (and I have my quibble with one aspect) and some trimming of those other aspects might have left us with more time for a smoother resolution.

    –One of the things I appreciate about this book is how honest it is about falling in love after losing someone. Often, I think romance can be rather cruel to the dead spouse, as it were, and diminishes the relationship… which cheapens the central romance to me. Here, you see exactly how much both Solomon and Adina loved their lost partners. They didn’t get to choose to end the relationships. They were cut off. Who knows what would have happened if their partners had lived, but that’s the reality we’re living with, right? And it doesn’t lessen their love for their new partners at all.

    The Sex:

    Ooooh, it’s good. There aren’t too many full-length sex scenes in the novel, but those that you do get are very long, preceded by a lot of tension, and INTENSE. Solomon is super growly and aggressive, and Adina kind of gets to let her own naturally dominant side take a bit of a backseat when he’s tossing her around. We love to see it.

    Approaching tough topics with grace, Played is a hot, emotional book that remains a good time throughout, even when it gets deep. (And the book isn’t the only one that gets deep heeeeey–.) Definitely a “hockey romance for people who don’t like hockey romances… and also those that do” kind of novel.

    Thanks to NetGalley and Montlake for providing me with a copy of this book. All thoughts and opinions are my own.

    0
    comments 0
    Reply
  • DocRobReads
    Mar 26, 2025
    Enjoyment: Quality: Characters: Plot:

    4.25 ⭐️
    This was the first book I have read by Naima Simone, and it won't be the last. She wrote a smart, sexy, story that really touched me. I felt like I could relate to both main characters who were dealing with the after effects of losses so big that they had encompassed their worlds. It was the one thing they had in common that not only brought them together but also lay at the center of their primary conflict. Great, emotional storytelling! 💖

    0
    comments 0
    Reply
  • View all reviews
    Community recs if you liked this book...