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Stranger Things Have Happened : A Novel. Cover Image Book Book

Stranger Things Have Happened : A Novel.

West, Kasie. (Author).

Summary:

Can fake dating lead to real love? In Kasie West's next sexy adult romcom, two people must decide where the lie ends and the chemistry begins. From the author of 'We Met Like This'.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781250349163
  • Physical Description: 352 pages ; 13 x 21 cm
  • Publisher: Canada : St. Martin's Publishing Group, 2026.

Content descriptions

Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
Library Bound Incorporated
Subject: FICTION / Romance / Fake Dating
FICTION / Romance / Romantic Comedy
Genre: Romance fiction.

Available copies

  • 0 of 1 copy available at Tsuga Consortium.

Holds

  • 1 current hold with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Lakeshore Branch ON ORDER pr08127132 FICTION On order -

  • Baker & Taylor
    "Bestselling author Kasie West's next adult rom-com about a young woman who makes a deal to save her best friend and her fiance's relationship - as long as she and the fiance's alluring twin brother can convince a marriage counselor that they're a real couple. Needing to take a step back from her lifelong dream of running a bustling restaurant in Los Angeles, a young woman must return to her hometown along the East Coast to care for her ailing mother, despite their strained relationship after her father's abandonment of their family. But as she must balance her obligations to the restaurant, caring for her mother and attempting to mend their relationship, she makes a deal to save her best friend and her fiance's relationship - as long as she and the fiance's alluring twin brother can convince a marriage counselor that they're a real couple"-- Provided by publisher.
  • McMillan Palgrave

    Can fake dating lead to real love? In Kasie West's next sexy adult romcom two people must decide where the lie ends and the chemistry begins.

    Sutton knows she needs therapy. After all, she’s managing her newly opened restaurant remotely while taking care of her ungrateful sick mother. Plus, her boyfriend of two years just dumped her over the phone. But does therapy with a handsome stranger, who she has to pretend to be engaged to, in order to help her friend’s struggling relationship count? Probably not. Then why did she just agree to go? Because she’s had a few too many drinks? Because this stranger, Elijah, is smug and annoying and really, really handsome? Because she feels guilty that she abandoned her best friend, Tara, after high school and this might just make up for it? Whatever the reason, she has committed to this unhinged plan.

    What the hell is Sutton doing?

    Helping Tara prove a point: a good therapist can tell the difference between real love and fake love. That’s what she’s doing. But as they attend their sessions, Sutton and Elijah only seem to be proving one thing—the lines between pretend desire and real desire are very blurry. This true connection forming between them is threatening to unravel everything Sutton thought she knew about family, friendship, and her own heart.


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