Tell Me How You Really Feel
The heartwarming new enemies-to-lovers romance from the TikTok sensation
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- 8,99 €
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- 8,99 €
Publisher Description
Maeve and Finn, the electric co-hosts of the smash-hit podcast Tell Me How You Really Feel, have just snagged the deal of a lifetime.
There’s only one tiny, inconvenient problem: they can’t stand each other.
Quitting isn’t an option. Which means Maeve and Finn must fake their on-air chemistry to keep the show at the top of the charts.
But what happens when pretending to get along feels more real than not?
Tune in to find out if sparks will fly or fizzle out. . .
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Authors adore Betty Cayouette's romance novels:
'A sweet and heartfelt romance' Hannah Grace, Sunday Times bestselling author of Icebreaker
'A dreamy, utterly transportive vacation in book form' Amy Lea, international bestselling author of Exes and O's
'The ultimate second-chance romance' Annabel Monaghan
‘Heartache, history, and loads of chemistry on every page’ Bridget Morrissey
‘A total delight’ Julia Argy
'Dazzles with second-chance romance so sweeping it’s picture-perfect’ Emily Wibberley and Austin Siegemund-Broka
'A romantic exploration of love, friendship, miscommunication, and growing up’ Hanna Halperin
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Fame and frequent misunderstandings complicate the friends-to-lovers relationship at the center of this cute if somewhat belabored contemporary from Cayouette (One Last Shot). College friends Maeve and Finn started their sex and relationship podcast, Tell Me How You Really Feel, after moving to New York City upon graduation. Years later, they're offered a life-changing deal with Streamify that would see them moving to L.A. for three years. The problem is, they can no longer stand each other. Cayoutte teases out what happened by toggling between past and present, revealing that Maeve and Finn did enter into a romantic relationship before everything went wrong. Communication issues abound, exacerbated by the class difference between these two: Maeve has struggled to get where she is today, while Finn is the privileged child of celebrities. Their road to romance is so rocky it comes with not one but two third act breakups. Readers with a low tolerance for the miscommunication trope will struggle, but Cayoutte's exploration of workplace romance and frank discussion of the gender pay gap make this valuable. Even with its flaws, there's plenty of sweetness here to make the happy ending worth the wait.