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Star Shipped

Not yet published
Expected 3 Mar 26
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Cat Sebastian’s long-awaited foray into contemporary romance! A witty, emotional, and deliciously slow burn enemies-to-lovers romance between two costars on a popular sci-fi television series.

Simon and Charlie, actors on a long-running sci-fi show, can’t stand one another. Charlie is impetuous, outgoing, and basically feral, and Simon thinks he should have stayed in reality television where he belongs. They’ve spent the better part of a decade quarreling over the spotlight and pretty much everything else, and everybody in the industry knows it. Now that Simon’s contract is finally done, he can move to New York, start fresh with work he actually likes, and get away from Charlie.

Simon’s only problem is that people might assume he’s been pushed off the show due to being impossible to work with. And he is kind of difficult to work with. He doesn’t get along with people—unlike Charlie, who somehow tricked everyone on the show into adoring him despite some outrageously bad on-set behavior during the show’s first season. Simon would rather never have to see Charlie again, but reluctantly agrees to stage a very public friendship during the short time before he moves. When Charlie has to leave town to deal with a family emergency, this means Simon comes along. Their road trip brings Simon to places he would never have willingly chosen to visit—and he finds he’s actually not having a terrible time.

The more he gets to know Charlie, the more Simon suspects he’s underestimated his former coworker. Simon also realizes that after seven years, Charlie might know him better than anyone ever has. Even stranger, Charlie seems to be starting to actually like him, despite knowing him so well. Still, Simon is about to move three thousand miles away, so whatever’s starting between him and Charlie can’t really amount to anything... right?

Tropes:

Enemies to Lovers

Opposites Attract

Forced Proximity

Slow Burn

384 pages, Paperback

Expected publication March 3, 2026

17 people are currently reading
9703 people want to read

About the author

Cat Sebastian

27 books5,111 followers
Cat Sebastian has written sixteen queer historical romances. Cat’s books have received starred reviews from Kirkus, Publishers Weekly, Library Journal, and Booklist.

Before writing, Cat was a lawyer and a teacher and did a variety of other jobs she liked much less than she enjoys writing happy endings for queer people. She was born in New Jersey and lived in New York and Arizona before settling down in a swampy part of south. When she isn’t writing, she’s probably reading, having one-sided conversations with her dog, or doing the crossword puzzle.

The best way to keep up with Cat’s projects is to subscribe to her newsletter.

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5 stars
121 (60%)
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65 (32%)
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13 (6%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 154 reviews
Profile Image for B.K. Borison.
Author 10 books15.5k followers
September 6, 2025
Without a doubt, one of my top romances of the year. Absolutely phenomenal.
Profile Image for Ali L.
375 reviews8,330 followers
November 10, 2025
review TK but please know that Cat Sebastian is a wizard or something idk
Profile Image for Fernanda (ivyfer_isreading).
292 reviews74 followers
December 15, 2025
It took me a while to get used to the writing, it isn't as flowy as what I'm used to in romance books, but once I got past that start I ate it up. 
This was my first Cat Sebastian book, hence the first part about how I'm not used to her writing. I'm not a fan of historical books, but this is contemporary so I thought I'd give it a try and I was pleasantly surprised. 
We follow Charlie, an actor in a tv series, and his co-star of seven years, Simon. Charlie has severe anxiety and mild OCD, and that's a big part of the plot which I loved. The author handled the feeling of having limitations and being at war with yourself because you don't want other people to have to go out of their way for you beautifully.
The way Charlie accepts Simon for who he is, accommodating to make things better for him, it's so sweet I could cry(I actually did cry a few times). Don't go in expecting a lot of smut, this is not it. Star Shipped is mainly a book about finding your people and accepting yourself. I love how the characters are a little older, showing you don't have everything figured out once you hit 30, it's a constant journey. 
I really liked Star Shipped, I might even try her other books. 

Thank you Netgalley and Avon Books for the ARC!
Profile Image for 1stTimeReader.
204 reviews4 followers
Want to read
November 18, 2024
Cat Sebastian could write a 60k worth of grocery list and i’d still want to read it.
Profile Image for Ditte.
591 reviews126 followers
October 6, 2025
Rating: 4.25

"You are a mess. A disaster. And that fact is so special to me.”

Star Shipped (OUT MARCH 3, 2026) is Cat Sebastian's first contemporary novel and it's what you get when you take all her Cabot books and mix them with Star Trek RPF. In other words: this book is delightful and laugh-out-loud funny with emotions that hit you straight in the gut. The MCs costar in a long-running sci-fi show and there's plenty of fantastic banter as their relationship evolves from mutual dislike to romance.

"I’m trying to be nice,” Simon complains.
“You’re so bad at it. Have you ever tried before? Is this your first time? Should I be flattered?” Somehow, Charlie’s managing to sound mean and hurt and fake-flirty all at once.


The characters are Going Through It, Simon more so than Charlie, and the book does a great job getting into the mind of someone who feels in a place of unbelonging in the world and who often struggles to get through the day without a minor breakdown or two.

These guys are both dealing with a lot and they both remain disaster gremlins with emotional constipation throughout. Just a little less so with each other as time goes on and they start to build something between them ❤️

"I can’t fake normal right now.”
That’s so uncomfortably relatable that Simon’s at a loss about what to say.


As someone who grew up in fandom, Star Shipped felt perfectly aligned with my interests in so many ways. I've literally been part of fandom discussions like the Discord messages in the book 😂
I was snort-laughing while reading and also wincing from being perceived (so rude!) and I almost felt like Simon was too relatable at time 😅

That said, the pacing was a bit off for me and the ending didn't quite feel complete. There were also some things regarding Simon's mental health and diagnoses that I wasn't fully satisfied with and while I adored the romance, I wanted more of it heh.

"I don’t want to ruin this,” he says in a rush. “Don’t let me ruin it.”

Overall though, this was a fantastic book! Cat Sebastian remains my favourite author and regardless of whichever genre her next book is, I'll be getting my grubby little hands on it because I just adore her writing so much.

Thanks to Avon for the ARC
Profile Image for Mac.
204 reviews35 followers
November 18, 2025
4.5!

This felt different from Cat Sebastian’s usual and not just because it’s her first contemporary! Despite the differences, there’s that signature CatSeb style and heart at the core of the story. This almost felt less focused on the romance and more on our two mc’s, Simon and Charlie, learning to just be more gentle with themselves and each other. However, by the very end, I was totally sold and swooning!

Simon Devereaux is “uncomfortably relatable” and I have this weird thing where I usually hate to see my own anxieties on the page. I’d like a moment away from them please and thank you! But Simon’s portrayal was done with a lot of care and I appreciated seeing it so much. I definitely know what it’s like to be your own worst enemy and his arc is really lovely to read.

I do wish we had Charlie’s pov! He’s such an interesting character and I would’ve loved to learn even more about him by seeing his perspective. The discord messages were absolutely hilarious and had me laughing out loud. This is 100% a love letter to fandom and this will feel familiar if you’ve ever been in one.

In short, CatSeb’s foray into contemporary paid off! But you already knew it would. I certainly had no doubts.

Thank you to NetGalley and Avon for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.
___________________________________

I’m seated. The bookstore employees are scared and asking me to leave because it’s “not even published yet” but I’m simply TOO seated
Profile Image for Ashley.
3,507 reviews2,381 followers
to-read-romance
June 25, 2025
this is the Cat Sebastian book i never knew i always wanted
Profile Image for Sara.
160 reviews14 followers
December 9, 2025
I swear to god Cat Sebastian could write a grocery list and I would buy 12 copies and submit it for a Pulitzer.

STAR SHIPPED was perfection. Simon and Charlie’s banter was unmatched and their chemistry left me swooning. The book itself was really low angst with minimal drama. These two were so freaking funny while also being so tender and protective of one another. The mental health rep was phenomenal and I am beyond obsessed with Edie. She’s a dog, and I wouldn’t hesitate to serve jail time for her.

If you want to read about two idiots in love who quickly get their heads out of their asses and fall hard while also still (affectionately) bullying one another, this is for you.
Profile Image for Louis Muñoz.
349 reviews188 followers
October 21, 2025
3.75 stars, rounded up. Cat Sebastian's books have been very enjoyable these past few years since my discovering them. This one was quite different, though. For example, two of Sebastian's previous books, "We Could Be So Good" and its even better sequel, "We Should Be So Lucky," are set in mid-20th century New York, but this new book, set to come out next March, is set in the present day. In her acknowledgements, Sebastian thanks her agent, her editor, and her publishers for their faith in her "writing something a little different," and I'm very grateful they did, because her work shines as much when it's set in the contemporary world as it does when set in the past.

Many thanks to NetGalley, the author, and the publishers for a digital ARC of this book in exchange for my honest opinions.
Profile Image for Rhiannon.
109 reviews27 followers
September 23, 2025
Simon Devereaux, you are so special to me.

I loved every single word of this book with my whole entire being. I knew I would; that’s how I feel about everything Cat Sebastian writes. But, man, this one really got me.

Sometimes you read a book and feel like you might as well be reading your own personal journal with the way you see yourself reflected on the pages. This was one of those books for me. Simon reminded me so much of myself in ways that were sometimes difficult to confront. I think that’s what I love so much about Cat’s books: she knows how to create characters who are raw and jagged and imperfect and make you love them anyway. And perhaps in loving those characters you’re able to recognize that all of those shared characteristics, the things that drive you crazy about yourself but that you hold gently and tenderly when you see them in a character like Simon, don’t make you awful or unlovable or unworthy of human connection. Maybe that fixes you a little bit. Who’s to say?

I could wax poetic about this book, about Charlie and Simon and Jamie and Edie and fandom and blueberry muffins and the importance of getting out of your own goddamn way for five minutes, for the foreseeable future. But I probably don’t need to do that. If you’ve read Cat’s books before, you know what to expect. It’s all of those things, and it’s a little bit more, because it’s Charlie and Simon, and they’re their own brand of messy and soft and wonderful.

Thank you to Edelweiss and Avon for an advanced copy and for continuing to understand my deep-seated need to get my hands on Cat’s books as soon as humanly possible. You really do pull through every time.
Profile Image for Lauren.
53 reviews2 followers
June 22, 2025
As a life-long fangirl, a years-long Cat Sebastian stan, and a huge advocate for "I hate him so much I know every single thing about him oops actually that's not hate," this book was written specifically and exclusively for me. I loved it with every fiber of my being.
Profile Image for Stephanie (stephreadsallthebooks).
464 reviews19 followers
November 7, 2025
Thank you Avon for the eARC of Star Shipped by Cat Sebastian which publishes March 3rd, 2026. All thoughts and opinions are my own and I am leaving this review voluntarily.

Ya'll this is it - it's my favorite romance of the year. I'll say *so far* for now but I'm really doubtful that anything will top it at this point. It's unreasonably good and I absolutely made the right decision by dropping everything to read this.

Charlie and Simon are stars on a sci-fi series and they've always been adversaries and never friends. But after a family emergency turned unexpected road trip, the more they get to know each other and Simon realizes that his assumptions about Charlie just aren't really true. And suddenly Simon *likes* spending time with Charlie much to his surprise.

Charlie and Simon are so freaking special to me - Cat Sebastian's character work is always top notch. Her character's motivations are always really clear to readers because we get to know her characters so well - even characters that we don't have POVs from. Charlie and Simon treat each other with such care and compassion and seeing their relationship blossom is truly beautiful. I already can't wait to reread this.

The anxiety/OCD rep is very very good here - and what's even better is how Charlie and Simon's best friend treat Simon's anxiety. It's never made out to be this thing that he needs to overcome or something that the other characters have to "deal with". It's just simply treated as a part of Simon and the other characters find ways to support him not because they have to, but because they want him to be more comfortable. There's a few really beautiful scenes where the other characters make sure Simon knows that they care for him by doing what they can to help with his anxiety and that it's not a burden for them to do those things.

GAH I feel like I could write a dissertation about this book, that's how much I loved it! If you do check this one out and like it, I really recommend checking out Cat's historical romances which are amongst some of my favorites.
Profile Image for megan ◡̈.
846 reviews589 followers
November 20, 2025
to be honest i dont even know where to begin with this review, i have a lot of conflicting feelings with it because over all i really enjoyed my time reading this but it also felt very chaotic and not in a fun way? if i hadn’t liked charlie and simon together as much as i did this probably would have ended up a three star read for me, but i actually really enjoyed simon once he finally got out of his own way a little bit.

my biggest issue here is i personally can only excuse someones rude behavior so much, i try to be very considerate with the way people act especially those with severe mental health issues as someone who also deals with it but i very much believe that your mental health issues are not an excuse to act like the way simon did more often than not in the first half… i got such extreme whiplash from him and since were are only in his pov the entire book sometimes it just got to be too much. i think the OCD rep in this book was phenomenally written, simon felt extremely relatable in that aspect, the way charlie was so understanding of the things that simon needs was also amazing. my literal only hang up with simon is just a lot of his actions and excuses in the first half didnt sit right with me… i didnt dislike him by any means but i also wasnt invested in or wanting to root for him.

like i said once simon got out of his own way about halfway through i was flyingggg through this book even faster than the first half because i finally found myself enjoying being in his head more, his random fights with charlie through out the second half were still very jarring because i just couldnt comprehend why either of them were starting shit out of now where in the middle of a nice moment but like at least the shit was entertaining???? so theres that??? 😂

to be loved by charlie blake would just be the stuff of everyones dreams honestly. i really loved his character and i loved all of the ways he was able to help simon have these breakthroughs mentally and didnt put up with his shit. i truly dont think there would be a better person for simon than charlie.

a lot of this book happens during the shows off season and i realllllly wish we would have gotten a bit more on set scenes or instead of the discord interludes that i could have personally done without, little scripts or scenes the episodes mentioned through out charlie and simon’s watching together. i think that would have been astronomically more interesting than the discord, i dont really feel like it added anything to the story.

i truly cannot wait to get my hands on the audiobook for this (if anyone in that department is reading this a duet style would be especially insane for this book in the best way). i think that all of the different spats simon and charlie had through out this book and their sweet moments would just send me over the edge and i need to reread it that way 🙂‍↕️
Profile Image for Rebecca.
4,308 reviews69 followers
November 8, 2025
As Cat Sebastian notes in the afterword, not everyone's experiences with anxiety and migraines will mirror Simon's...but my anxiety certainly does. Why am I talking about anxiety in a review of a largely fluffy, cozy contemporary queer romance novel? Because Simon, one half of the main couple and our point of view character, spends the entire book - and his whole life - trying to cope with crippling anxiety that gets in the way of his life. One of the strongest elements of this is that he doesn't even realize how much it impacts him. Oh, yes, he knows that he can be unpleasant and that he has specific issues relating to socialization, but until he really thinks about it, it's just the feeling that his brain is his enemy sometimes. As one line puts it, he has rules that he didn't even realize were rules until someone broke them.

At the risk of sharing too much, this is a perfect distillation of what an extreme anxiety/panic disorder feels like, for me at least. Your brain isn't always your friend and you start thinking of it as a separate entity, you arrange things to please its whims so that you can function, and even though you know it technically qualifies as a disability, you resist that notion. Dogs are your friends. Crowds and most people are not. If this sounds at all like you, Simon will make you feel seen.

But even without that alarmingly real depiction of anxiety, this is a good book. Simon and Charlie have spent seven years together on a science fiction TV show, mostly with Charlie deliberately trying to get on Simon's nerves as a manifestation of both his crush and meeting a childhood hero (Simon's seven years older than him) who turned out to be upsettingly human. But as they begin to see through each others' insecurities and walls, the slow-burn they've been unwittingly engaged in begins to burn faster, leading to a romance with plenty of little fences to hop over, but great rewards once they're cleared.

I do wish we'd gotten some chapters from Charlie's point of view, not because I didn't understand him, but because I expect that from this author's books...and, okay, yes, I might have understood him better. But ultimately I loved this and actively resented anything, like work of helping my family, that took me away from it. If you like Sebastian's books, you're probably already going to read it (yes, there are sweaters and a dog), but if you haven't discovered her yet, this may be a good gateway into her works.
Profile Image for Jason Conrad.
278 reviews39 followers
November 18, 2025
My third Cat Sebastian book, and I can loudly proclaim that she has never let me down!

While this isn’t my favorite work of hers (How can you top We Could Be So Good?), it was still so much fun.

Cat Sebastian’s first foray into contemporary romance is, unsurprisingly, a complete success. There is a unique softness and wit to her writing that has you swooning one moment, giggling the next, and ready to cry a few pages later.

Her specialty is honing in on the smallest intimate moments between her characters — and how meaningful those moments are.

I loved the OCD representation. It was accurate and authentic and really showcases how debilitating the disease is. Some of the most touching moments were when Charlie made the effort to understand it. Even more touching when he accepted Simon for who he is.

My only critique — There simply wasn’t a plot after the first third of the book. I’m all for “no plot, just vibes” books, but I think I wanted a grander ending.

All of this to say — if you love queer romance stories, this is an exceptional one. Can’t wait for the world to meet Simon and Charlie!

Big thank you to NetGalley for an eARC of this book in exchange for a review.

They also hooked me up with an eARC of You Should Be So Lucky a while back — the kindness is so appreciated!

Profile Image for reverie.
156 reviews22 followers
November 10, 2025
Real RTC - work kicked my ass and I'm too tired to give this the love and care it deserves. Cat Sebastian has done it again, folks.
Profile Image for Kaela.
181 reviews
June 10, 2025
Simon, aka what if Spock had anxiety and attended therapy:

"Don't worry, it was only physical."
"Obviously."
"I didn't like you or anything."
"Who would?" Simon says reasonably.

Charlie, aka what if William Shatner had actually been the most likable person on set:

"You know you can't cuddle a raccoon, right Charlie?"
"Not with that attitude you can't."
Profile Image for Angie Miale.
1,098 reviews141 followers
November 19, 2025
A lively MM romcom set in modern day Hollywood. Charlie and Simon are starring in the nerd space show "Out There," and the discord servers think their characters are queer coded. Charlie came up as an influencer, and Simon is thinking of leaving the show. He doesn't think much of Charlie, despite he is a mid-20's beautiful actor that takes a lot of gym selfies.

The best thing about this book is the banter- it is truly elite. Some people are sort of bothered by enemies-to-lovers banter, as sometimes it is mean and passive aggressive, but I found this to be really clever. I wouldn't say the leads are exactly "enemies" just two co-workers that are more like rivals.

Cat Sebastian has written so many classic historical fiction novels, and has established herself as a voice that gives authenticity to the LGBTQ experience while closeted and living in a time that was not safe for queer people. In this novel, we have a current day experience but still one of the leads is closeted and questioning. The setting was intriguing as we had a little behind the scenes of how TV shows are produced, the show runners, the social media presence. The interstitial chapters are a discord of fans of the show, and these were some of my favorite parts of the book. It explores celeb worship and how sometimes we think we are entitled to the details of their lives.

4.5/5 stars
Thank you to NetGalley and Avon and Harper Voyager for the ARC. Book to be published 3/3/2026
Profile Image for Lily.
759 reviews734 followers
October 20, 2025
No one does the black cat/golden retriever trope or the grumpy/sunshine trope like Cat Sebastian and that's a damn fact. Her characters are always so grounded and full of banter and deeply vulnerable, and I love them every single time.
Profile Image for Madison.
990 reviews471 followers
October 14, 2025
sorry sorry sorry but I hated this!

Cat Sebastian's first foray into contemporary romance wasn't bad because it was contemporary--she did that part well. There just isn't any story here, and also very little chemistry. I liked that Simon is an anxious mess but I didn't really feel invested in him and Charlie. at one point they say they're boyfriends and I'm like oh word? OK then.

I also found a lot of the fanfiction-y RPF-esque aspects almost intolerably cringe. I felt like I was reading a bad J2 fic from 2010 when Charlie and Simon start watching the TV show they star in. It reminded me of when, at FanExpo Boston in 2018, someone in the audience told Freddie Prinze Jr. that he should totally watch Buffy (he's married to Sarah Michelle Gellar). You could hear every asshole in the audience clench shut out of pure embarrassment. That's what reading this whole book felt like.
Profile Image for Jenna.
389 reviews33 followers
Review of advance copy received from Edelweiss+
December 13, 2025
this book cleared my skin, watered my crops, and cured my depression. cat sebastian books truly heal my soul.
Profile Image for Meg.
2,050 reviews91 followers
November 4, 2025
Simon Deveraux and Charlie Blake are co-stars on a sci-fi tv show called Out There, pitched as Twin Peaks in Space. They absolutely hate each other. Nothing could be worse for Simon than being trapped in close physical proximity to someone who gets under his skin the way Charlie does. Simon has severe anxiety, moderate OCD, and migraines, and it doesn't take much to bring out his inner petty; mostly he stays quiet, but it also turns out pushing Charlie's buttons brings him small joy. When rumor gets out that the sets of two shows Simon has worked on have been "complete disasters" and people start wondering if Simon is contributing factor, Charlie and Simon concoct a plan to show everyone just how civil and friendly they can be. This turns into a spontaneous road trip, chafing in each other's company, and ultimately discovering what lies beneath the layers of each of their external personalities.

In absolute classic Cat Sebastian form, Star Shipped is a character-driven care-taking love story that spreads languorously across the pages. There isn't a driving plot, as is often the case with her books, but I find that I never mind because her characters are so vivid. Instead her books are structured with small events that give a slice of life picture of the characters. Star Shipped features interstitials - snippets from Out There fan Discord conversations - which help with the pacing of the story, and give total outside perspective while poking fun at the online parasocial relationship people have with celebrities.

While we have a classic "adversaries" to lovers setup, none of it feels contrived. When they first meet, Charlie is twenty and in some ways is beneath Simon's notice, even though they co-star in the show. Charlie has little acting experience, and in his first season he showed up late, dumped coffee on a guest director, and backed up into said director's truck (intentionally) before spending time in rehab. Simon holds this behavior against him - even if he sees that rehab worked and Charlie's acting has consistently improved over the years - largely because the network seems to think that Charlie's abs are the best thing to grace the set (begrudgingly, Simon cannot disagree). Charlie and Simon bicker and needle each other constantly, and it isn't until they are put into close proximity with a road trip for a family emergency that they begin to open up and reveal the hidden layers. They pose as fake friends, hook up, and become real friends, which blossoms into an organic relationship. They aren't really opposites - though Simon is a prickly anxious b*tch and Charlie is a caretaking hugger - they are complementary, it just takes them years into the show to realize that.

Told entirely in present tense from Simon's perspective, I was nervous that the anxiety would be too overwhelming to read, but she makes it work. While his problems are real and at times severe through the book, as someone with anxiety, I found that Sebastian softens the edges and makes Simon relatable rather than raising my own anxiety. (This will likely be different with every reader!) Every romance is about the main characters learning to look at themselves a little differently: seeing themselves through the eyes of their love interest and working through plot points that they might respond to differently were they alone. With the perspective entirely Simon's, we see him work through his anxiety by learning to ask for and accept help. The reader also sees that Simon views himself differently than others see him, and it's a reminder to the reader that in our darkest moments, we still have worth and are deserving of friendship and love.

The moment this hit my kindle (thank you Avon!) I dropped the other books I was reading to start it, and then I finished within a day. I loved every single second of the prickly, awkward, loving, protecting, caretaking and poking fun on these pages. As someone who grew up on sci fi tv (Babylon 5 and TNG for me), Star Shipped was a highlight of my most anticipated upcoming reads, and it didn't disappoint.

Thank you to Avon for an eARC. Star Shipped is out 3/3/2026.
Profile Image for Kalyani.
554 reviews115 followers
November 12, 2025
cat sebastian you cannot keep winning like this!!! I loved this - genuinely so tender and funny and warm. It reminded me a lot of You Should Be So Lucky which is my favorite Cat Sebastian. This book is all from Simon’s pov and I loved being in his anxious overthinky head. So much of the way he’s characterized spoke to me and I think Sebastian is a champion of writing love stories for people who believe they don’t deserve them!!

also the way her characters speak to each other feels so real. they don’t have the perfect thing to say and they feel awkwardly and painfully when it comes to vulnerability and what more can one ask for when it comes to a believable romance!!!!

need 5 more of these by the end of next year please ms. Sebastian

ps: this was such a love letter to fandom too
Profile Image for Terri.
2,856 reviews59 followers
November 6, 2025
I read the NetGalley ARC of this novel, this is my honest review:

Once again, I read a Cat Sebastian novel at lightning speed because I couldn't not.

From the first line, this one promises amusement and depth, and it delivers. Neither character is at all perfect, but they are good actors. Somehow, they connect anyway. They appealed to me without fail even at their worst--and like tractor beams at their best.

I sighed when I had to stop and smiled when I returned, and I don't know what else one could possibly want from a romance.
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