Still Into You
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- Pedido anticipado
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- Se espera: 10 feb 2026
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- $229.00
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- Pedido anticipado
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- $229.00
Descripción editorial
Two exes reunite for a make-or-break interview that will either bring them back together ... or drive them apart forever.
Sloane Donavan dreamed of being a rock journalist ever since she posted her first MySpace blog. Now, one journalism degree, a failed internship, and dozens of backstage passes later, she’s struggling to land a full-time staff position. So when punk rock’s most notorious and elusive frontman offers her his first interview in eight years, Sloane should be jumping at the opportunity—but taking it would mean reconnecting with the only guy she’s ever loved (and lost), Dax Nakamura.
Unable to pass up a shot at making her name—and helping Dax clear the reputation that’s plagued his—Sloane agrees. It’s only a conflict of interest if anyone finds out. But the article Dax wants and the salacious tell-all Sloane’s editor is expecting are two completely different stories. And as old feelings resurface, Sloane’s journalistic integrity hangs in the balance. This is the career-making piece she’s been waiting for, but it comes with a price: the chance to rewrite the ending with her first and only love.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Connor (Unromance) offers up an entertaining second-chance celebrity romance set in the early 2000s. Sloane Donavan's goal is to transition from freelance to full-time journalism. She gets what could be her big break when the world-famous rock group Final Revelations agrees to sit down with her for their first interview in eight years. There's just one problem: the group's lead singer, Dax Nakamura, is Sloane's ex-boyfriend, which presents a major conflict of interest—if it gets out, that is. The group hopes to use the piece to clean up their image, but Sloane's editor is eager for every bit of gossip she can dig up, and Sloane's horrible former mentor is also circling for exclusive scoops. As Sloane uncovers more of the band's secrets, she rediscovers her feelings for Dax, and the lines between her work and romance begin to blur. Early aughts nostalgia, interview transcripts, and articles chronicling Final Revelations' history add to the fun, and the found-family dynamic between the bandmates is a highlight. Connor also makes good use of the forced proximity trope to amp up the yearning. Readers will not be disappointed.