Book Boyfriend
Books | Fiction / Romance / Romantic Comedy
3.3
Kris Ripper
"This is a delight." —Publishers Weekly on The Hate ProjectA secret crush leads to a not-so-secret romance in this delightful romantic comedy from Kris RipperThere are three things you need to know about Preston "PK" Harrington the third: He’s a writer, toiling in obscurity as an editorial assistant at a New York City publishing house. He is not a cliché. No, really. He’s been secretly in love with his best friend, Art, since they once drunkenly kissed in college.When Art moves in with PK following a bad breakup, PK hopes this will be the moment when Art finally sees him as more than a friend. But Art seems to laugh off the very idea of them in a relationship, so PK returns to his writing roots—in fiction, he can say all the things he can’t say out loud.In his book, PK can be the perfect boyfriend.Before long, it seems like the whole world has a crush on the fictionalized version of him, including Art, who has no idea that the hot new book everyone's talking about is PK’s story. But when his brilliant plan to win Art over backfires, PK might lose not just his fantasy book boyfriend, but his best friend.Carina Adores is home to romantic love stories where LGBTQ+ characters find their happily-ever-afters.Also from Kris Ripper:The Love StudyBook 1: The Love StudyBook 2: The Hate ProjectBook 3: The Life Revamp
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More Details:
Author
Kris Ripper
Pages
304
Publisher
Harlequin
Published Date
2022-04-26
ISBN
0369717945 9780369717948
Community ReviewsSee all
"Rating: 4/5 ⭐️
The way this book is written in a way that scratches my little ADHD brain. The main character, PK, overthinks everything and all of that is basically thrown onto the paper, which might be daunting to some people, but if you have thoughts that go a million miles a minute like I do, everything just makes sense. The plot is a little slow, but the way it's written is fast if that makes sense.
I love the way that PK describes Art (the love interest) and the way that he feels about them. Everything in his head is so chaotic but when he thinks about Art when he is observing them it's just so slow and poetic. Ie: "In my head? Feelings were this loud, clanging, confused mass of noise. But for Art, feelings were colors and textures, things he could make sense of, could sort if organize."
(At this point in the book Art had not come out as enby yet)"