House of Morgan
Date Published: 07-29-2025
Publisher: Love in a book
It started with an email from Jennifer Gonzales. It ended with me walking into a boardroom face-to-face with the man who once loved her. The same man who looks at me like I’m a threat to everything he built.
And maybe I am.
He’s cold. Controlled. Italian billionaire in an Armani suit, hiding bruises behind bank accounts. He thinks I’m still loyal to my former best friend—the woman who broke his brother’s heart and stole something she should’ve never touched.
But I’m not here for Belle. I’m here to do a job.
Security. Protection. No distractions.
Except Anthony Morgan is a distraction.
His eyes strip me bare. His voice is a seduction I never saw coming. And every time we fight, it feels like foreplay.
Getting too close to him is a mistake. Falling for him? Dangerous.
But if there’s one thing I’ve learned from war zones and heartbreak… It’s that the most forbidden fire burns the hottest.
And Anthony Morgan is pure flame.
Interview with Victoria Pinder
What is your favorite part of the book?
I don’t know if I have a favorite part as that’s picking pieces of a puzzle and saying this piece is the best when you need all the pieces in a puzzle for the big picture. But I will say I loved writing Emily as so focused on her job and her not believing in love for herself but believing she’s great at her job something interesting about all of us humans I think. We don’t see how we can be great in all things and push away parts of us because we never had the exposure or right frame of mind when we were shown something that could be amazing.
Does your book have a lesson? Moral?
This is romance so of course there is hope for everyone. But I will say it’s sometimes harder to take a chance on believing in love because you never had it before than winning in a fist fight if you need. Everything is possible.
Of all the characters you have created, which is your favorite and why?
Anyone who reads the Morgans probably assumes Jennifer and Peter as their story has now been subplot for almost 19 books. But that’s not true. They are my soap opera elements of romance novels. And I do love drama.
What character in your book are you least likely to get along with?
I would probably get along with all my characters, good and bad. I think there is a spark of the author in all the characters that we are exploring as part of ourselves. Even if the character is the worst of the worst (like the dead Mitch Morgan in my books whose hand is reaching from the grave to mess with all his children’s lives still), there is still a part of the story inside me that relates to all.
What would the main character in your book have to say about you?
Emily would probably say I’m too nice and open. Anthony would probably dismiss me entirely as an annoying know it all.
Do you want each book to stand on its own, or are you trying to build a body of work with connections between each book?
The Morgan novels and all my books are in my own universe and there are over 100. I think at some point Brandon Campbell from my favorite series at having drinks at one of the Morgan parties. But I feel the House of Morgan is its own main universe. There are 25 siblings and 25 novels planned and this is only 19. I have 20 drafted and the prequel drafted so yeah there is a family connection. I think in the Morgans, it’s even if you were separated from your family and sectioned off into groups as an adult we all have choices. We can choose to stay close to our family and be one unit (like the Morgans) or we can choose to just start over and not honor your family. I like to think of the Morgans as the ideal. It would be nice to be able to know your siblings choose to be in your life as an adult. And I know it’s a soap opera I’m telling here but I like the idea of family. And yes it’s an ideal but it’s the ideal I honestly wish was true.
USA Today Bestselling Author, Victoria Pinder grew up in Irish Catholic Boston before moving to the Miami sun though she left that for a while to live in New Orleans, Denver and now Pittsburgh. She started single but the husband and then children joined in on the fun. She’s worked in engineering, then lawyer, then teacher, and finally novelist. She refused to one day turn 50 and realize she had nothing but her career and hours at a desk.
During all this time and travel, she always wrote stories to entertain herself or calm down. Her parents are practical minded people demanding a job, and Victoria spent too many years living other people’s expectations, but when she sat down to see what skill she had that matched what she enjoyed doing, writing became so obvious. The middle school year book when someone wrote in it that one day she’d be a writer made sense when she turned thirty.
She’s always been amazing, adventurous and assured. It’s what gets her through the day.
Her website is www.victoriapinder.com where you can get a free read NOW. Please write as she loves writing back to her fans.
Twitter: @victoriapinder
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