Behind Frenemy Lines
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- USD 11.99
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- USD 11.99
Descripción editorial
Award-winning author Zen Cho delivers a sparkling and witty rivals-to-lovers romance reminiscent of Sally Thorne's The Hating Game and Sajni Patel's The Trouble with Hating You.
Sparks fly when an ambitious rules-bound lawyer clashes with a maverick new hire who threatens his chances of partnership—and the walls he's built around his heart.
Charles Goh has always played by the rules. It’s how he survived his difficult childhood as the swotty foreigner at a posh English boarding school -- and now, his high-pressure job at one of the biggest corporate law firms in London. His job is his life and he's happy that way … until she shows up.
Kriya Rajasekar's lost her way. Her longtime boyfriend's broken up with her and she feels trapped in her legal career. She knows she needs a fresh start -- but it turns out her new job is at the same firm as her work nemesis. Charles Goh is like the bad luck charm she keeps running into, and their encounters lead to disaster every single time. And now he's her office mate.
But just as they’re figuring out how to navigate this frenemy relationship, Kriya needs Charles’ help: pretend they’re dating so her boss will stop hitting on her. Soon, it becomes less clear whether they're enemies, friends – or something else.
At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Cho (The Friend Zone Experiment) charms in this sparkling tale of contentious coworkers discovering unexpected love. Londoner Kriya Rajasekar believes she and fellow lawyer Charles Goh are "bound together by an evil fate." He's been there to witness every one of her professional missteps, from misspeaking during a conference to literally falling flat on her face. When Kriya follows her boss, Arthur, to new firm Swithin Watkins, she's distraught to learn that she and Charles, who also works there, will be sharing an office. The vibe is tense at first, but Kriya soon learns that Charles's standoffishness stems from awkwardness rather than malice. As the two grow closer, Kriya uncovers Charles's heart of gold—and his gifts in the bedroom. Her personal life is on an upswing, but escalating sexual harassment from one of Swithin Watkins's partners puts Kriya's professional life in jeopardy. Add in Kriya and Charles's mutual inability to admit what they're feeling, and their budding romance may well be doomed. Readers will have no trouble rooting for these two to overcome the obstacles to their relationship, and Cho makes her villains just as detestable as her protagonists are lovable. Several cute subplots, including the anime-themed wedding of Charlie's cousin, Loretta, to her American fiancée, Hayley, add to the fun. This is a joy.