We Could Be So Good
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- £2.99
Publisher Description
‘A spectacularly talented writer!’
Julia Quinn, author of Bridgerton
From their first awkward meeting I was completely invested in Nick and Andy's relationship. Nick's grumpiness vs Andy's chaotic sunshine was wonderful.
Emma Denny, author of One Night in Hartswood
Nick should have hated Andy…
When Andy Fleming turns up in the newsroom of the New York Chronicle to learn the business Nick Russo is determined to dislike him. Nick has worked his way from a rough Brooklyn neighbourhood to reporter the hard way. Andy is heir to a publishing fortune: he can’t type, he loses his keys and has never done a day’s work in his life…and one day he’ll be Nick’s boss.
Except, Nick keeps rescuing Andy: showing him the ropes, tracking down his keys, freeing his tie when it gets stuck in the filing cabinets. Opposites in every way, an unlikely friendship soon turns into feelings neither want to deny. But a relationship that feels possible in secret, seems doomed in the light of day. And now Nick and Andy must decide if, for the first time, they’re willing to fight for what they really want.
Reviews
‘A spectacularly talented writer!’ – Julia Quinn, author of Bridgerton
‘Cat Sebastian is an author at the absolute top of her game’ – Erin Sterling, bestselling author of The Ex Hex
‘I simply couldn’t put it down’ Tessa Dare
About the author
Cat Sebastian has written sixteen queer historical romances. Cat’s books have received starred reviews from Kirkus, Publishers Weekly, Library Journal, and Booklist. Before writing, Cat was a lawyer and a teacher and did a variety of other jobs she liked much less than she enjoys writing happy endings for queer people. She was born in New Jersey and lived in New York and Arizona before settling down in a swampy part of south. When she isn’t writing, she’s probably reading, having one-sided conversations with her dog, or doing the crossword puzzle.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Sebastian (The Perfect Crimes of Marian Hayes) sets this irresistible romance in 1958, when Nick Russo, a cub reporter for the New York Chronicle, finds himself inexplicably smitten with the publisher's absent-minded son, Andy Fleming, who's "slumming it at the city desk... because his father threatened to cut off his allowance." After Andy's fiancée calls off their society wedding, a reeling Andy moves into Nick's West Village walk-up and their improbable friendship intensifies. Nick is secretly thrilled, but he also knows he needs to maintain caution as queer men can be arrested. In the Village, Andy's curiosity about queer life grows, and after he asks Nick to take him to a gay bar, he gains new clarity about his own desires and decides to declare his feelings. Once coupled up, however, the guys must worry about rumors. Meanwhile, Nick courts trouble with a piece he's writing on police corruption—and a blackmailer threatens to expose his relationship with Andy if he doesn't drop the story. There's plenty of conflict to keep the pages flying, but it's the scenes of Nick and Andy's cozy domesticity that truly shine. This wonderful period romance will leave readers just as giddy as its leads.