Oscar is a grouch. That’s a well-established fact among his tight-knit friend group, and they love him anyway. Jack is an ass. Jack, who’s always ready with a sly insult, who can’t have a conversation without arguing, and who Oscar may or may not have hooked up with on a strict no-commitment, one-time-only basis. Even if it was extremely hot. Together, they’re a bickering, combative mess. When Oscar is fired (answering phones is not for the anxiety-ridden), he somehow ends up working for Jack. Maybe while cleaning out Jack’s grandmother’s house they can stop fighting long enough to turn a one-night stand into a frenemies-with-benefits situation. The house is an archaeological dig of love and dysfunction, and while Oscar thought he was prepared, he wasn’t. It’s impossible to delve so deeply into someone’s past without coming to understand them at least a little, but Oscar has boundaries for a reason—even if sometimes Jack makes him want to break them all down. After all, hating Jack is less of a risk than loving him…
Lost Touch
Eliot Grayson
audiobookThe Actor and His Secret
Ben Alderson, Laura R. Samotin
audiobookYou Had Me at Happy Hour
Timothy Janovsky
audiobookThe (Fake) Dating Game
Timothy Janovsky
audiobookA Paradise on Earth (Barbara Cartland's Pink Collection 16)
Barbara Cartland
audiobookHis Grumpy Childhood Friend
Jackie Lau
audiobookChristmas Wishes at Pudding Hall
Kate Forster
audiobookI Love You So Mochi
Sarah Kuhn
audiobookItsy Bitsy Spider
Willow Rose
audiobookThe Golden Girls' Road Trip
Kate Galley
audiobookBite Me
Aidy Award
audiobookTease Me
Aidy Award
audiobook