
… when they team up to solve their romantic problems…īut pretending to date and actually becoming friends is harder than they thought, and their carefully laid plans soon turn into chaos. It’s not technically lying if they let their classmates think they’re dating to make their crushes jealous. When Eve catches Noah cheating off her test, their lives entangle, leading them to learn of each other’s romantic problems, and the Jealousy Pact is born. Noah parties hard, never studies, and secretly pines after his best friend and secret hook up, Henry. Eve studies hard, never parties, and secretly pines after her best friend’s brother, Oliver. Note: This book contains sexual references and explicit language but no sex scenes.Įve Knightly and Noah Rosselli think they have nothing in common. It is the first book in the Easton Grammar series. The book contains the enemies-to-lovers, slow burn, forbidden love, and forced proximity tropes. The Boyfriend Rivalry is a M/M Romance with a HEA featuring high school students. I won’t let her down, even if trying to be friends with Curtis makes me want to pull my hair out.īut through sharing a bedroom, beach soccer games, and sailing disasters, I realise that I might have been wrong about Curtis. If spending two weeks with Curtis wasn’t bad enough, Kennedy has also made me promise to be nice to her boyfriend. When Kennedy invites me to her family’s beach house for the school holidays, I think it’s the perfect opportunity to spend quality time with my girlfriend. I hate that he’s taller than me, I hate that he’s so confident, and I’m sure he’s trying to ruin my relationship because he’s secretly in love with Kennedy. The only problem is Kennedy’s best friend, Liam, who hates me. My relationship with my girlfriend, Kennedy, is almost perfect. The Straight Game is a slow burn M/M New Adult Romance with the strangers-to-friends-to-lovers trope. This thing we’re doing? It’s just a game. We’re just friends, and besides, I’m 100% straight.

But there are a lot of things about Daniel that are impressive - he’s kind, thoughtful, and absolutely gorgeous.

Honestly, I’m impressed Daniel’s brave enough to keep going, even when it means kissing and touching each other and taking our clothes off. Somehow our competitions somehow turn R-rated.

But as we spend the summer holidays together and our games get increasingly sexual, I’m forced to face the terrifying truth: I might like Tate more than a friend. I can’t say no to a competition, no matter whether it’s a swimming race or an intense match of truth or dare, no matter how much Tate makes my heart flutter.

Something about his toffee-brown eyes and fearless attitude immediately draws me in and I quickly learn we have a lot in common: When I’m stuck in an unfamiliar city, attending maths lectures for my final high school exams, I resign myself to two days of boredom.
