What If It's You?
The brand new speculative romance by Jilly Gagnon, perfect for fans of Ashley Poston!
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- $12.99
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
🔥❤️ Everyone wonders about the one that got away . . . ❤️🔥
✨ Speculative romance
✨ What if you could have two lives?
✨Sliding Doors with a romcom twist
A playful romantic comedy from the author of Love You, Mean It.
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You're supposed to be thrilled when you find a ring in your boyfriend's sock drawer, right? But Laurel Everett's just left wondering... 'what if?' Specifically, what if she'd taken up her work crush, Drew, on his offer of a date just after she and Ollie got together?
Thanks to her job at tech giant Pixel, she might have a way to answer that question. Through the AltR project, users are promised a glimpse of alternate realities, and Laurel just can't help herself...
When she wakes up five years into her life with Drew, she's fascinated at the difference, but there's a glitch in the system. Laurel keeps slipping between her new life with Drew, and her 'real' life with Ollie. As she moves back and forth between the two worlds, Laurel realises choosing the right life might not be as simple as deciding between two men and the different visions of happiness they offer. If Laurel doesn't find a way to untangle herself from the quantum mess she's unleashed, she might just wind up stuck in the wrong life, or worse, deleted entirely...
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Raves for Jilly Gagnon:
'Beautifully written, brilliant, and perfectly salty, Love You, Mean It is a total dream of a rom-com' LANA HARPER
'Delightfully tropey. . . Gagnon expertly combines humour and tenderness . . . This is a sweet confection' PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Gagnon (Scenes of the Crime) puts a high-tech twist on a classic love triangle in this clever contemporary. After Laurel Everett finds an engagement ring in her boyfriend Ollie's sock drawer, she deliberately sabotages their dinner date at a Boston restaurant, hoping to avoid a public proposal, as she is unsure if she is ready for marriage. Her fear of commitment is partly triggered by her lingering crush on handsome Drew, her coworker at tech company Pixel. When Laurel tries out an alternate reality program designed by Drew, she finds herself catapulted into a different world where she and him are in a long-term relationship. A glitch leaves her randomly toggling between these two realities, forcing her to decide which life—and which man—is right for her. Gagnon does not draw this mystery out long; Laurel fairly quickly realizes the depth of her feelings for one of her two suitors, and then the central plot becomes more about how she'll break free of the AR to stay with him. The romance sparkles, and Gagnon makes the science believable enough to suspend disbelief. Readers are sure to be sucked in.