"You're the best fake boyfriend I ever had."
"Love exists... in books, at least.".
There's no way bookstore owner Jeremy Bennett is going to his ten-year class reunion after accidentally drunk-posting on the reunion's Facebook page and making himself sound a) much more interesting than he actually is, by b) claiming to do the kind of things he actually only reads about, and c) worse, also claiming to have a super hot boyfriend, when in reality, d) his dating history is more like the bastard love child of a trainwreck and a what-not-to-do reality show.
"I'm no good at romance."
When one of Nick Roberts' personal training clients mistakes him for the boyfriend of a new gym member, Nick decides to play along on a whim. After all, he can't let the guy die from embarrassment, and besides, even though Nick isn't gay, he has a feeling that the story behind the mistaken identity might prove to be the most fun he's had since moving to Tulsa.
"I went from faking it to feeling it. Don't tell me this isn't real."
Falling for your fake boyfriend is a guaranteed dating fail. Unless the stars align...
Falling is a gay romance novel of approximately 86,000 words containing a drunken post on social media, a case of mistaken identity gone right, a whole lot of mud, some seizing of the day (among other things), and the kind of happily-ever-after that a certain book-loving romantic was pretty darn sure he'd never find in real life, and definitely not with a straight boy like the one he ended up falling for. It can be read as a standalone romance-no cliffhangers and a sweet HEA-but is also the third book in The Delicious Series, previously published under one of the author's many other pseudonyms (with a few tweaks and updates for this Second Edition!).