Hot Summer
A completely steamy and unputdownable LGBTQ+ romance
-
- $15.99
Publisher Description
PERFECT FOR FANS OF RED, WHITE & ROYAL BLUE, TESSA BAILEY AND ALI HAZELWOOD!
‘I can only hope that the upcoming seasons of Love Island are as entertaining as this is’ Reader Review
‘So wonderfully queer and brilliant!’ Reader Review
---
This summer, things are about to heat up.
Cas Morgan has spent years of her life watching Hot Summer, the hit dating show that pairs together a bunch of sexy singles in an exotic island location.
But she never quite thought she’d be a part of it, until her company secures a partnership with the show and Cas is handpicked as a contestant. If she does well and makes it to the finals, her long-awaited promotion will be secure.
Cas is ready to spend the summer trying to win over the voting public. But just as she steps into the villa, her entire plan goes off course. She’s instantly smitten with fellow contestant, Ada. Ada is gorgeous and charming.
As Cas’s feelings for Ada become undeniable, she’s torn between listening to her heart or sticking to her strategy.
----
Readers love Hot Summer:
‘The greatest sapphic meets reality dating competition book I’ve ever read!’
‘Hot Summer is chock-full of yearning, romance, spice, and competition and is just so FUN!!!’
‘This book is like watching an entire series of Love Island all rolled into one steamy, sapphic love story.’
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this inclusive, pop-culture-forward romance, Everhart (Wanderlust) sends her heroine into the world of reality television. Cas Morgan works for Friday, a popular dating app. When she's not running the app's in-person events, she's watching Hot Summer, a Love Island–esque British reality dating show about gorgeous people looking for love in a Cypriot villa. Then Cas's boss announces that Friday has landed an organic marketing deal with Hot Summer and offers Cas a promotion if she appears on the show and makes it to the finals. Cas heads to Cyprus for an eight-week, high-stakes vacation with at least nine other people. Cas, who is bisexual and whose fiancée recently left her at the altar, is looking for career advancement, not love—but she feels an unexpected connection to Ada, a fellow bisexual woman. The two grow closer, but what will happen when Ada learns Cas's true reasons for appearing on the show? Everhart has a light touch with both plotting and prose, and her heroines' bisexuality is refreshingly unsensationalized. Meanwhile, the supporting characters—especially obnoxious contestant Brad, a mansplainer with a short temper—feel impressively real. This is one to throw in the beach bag.