Bad Boyfriends, Inc.
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Books in this Series
Awfully Ambrose
Bad Boyfriends, Inc—When you can’t find a good boyfriend, why not hire a bad one instead? Ambrose Newman is a bad boyfriend. Professionally. If someone’s parents don’t approve of that long-haired unemployed bass player they want to date, that’s where Ambrose comes in. For a few hundred dollars a night, he’ll go to dinner with a client and their parents and show them that the grass is definitely not greener on his side of the fence. It’s dead. When Ambrose brings a date to a fancy restaurant, it isn’t sparks that fly—it’s glassware. After his last boyfriend turned out to be a cheat, Liam Connelly has no interest in dating again, but his parents are determined to see him paired off. When they come to visit, he hires Ambrose to act as his boyfriend. If Ambrose can be a bad boyfriend, he can be a tolerable one too, right? But Ambrose plays the part too well and scores an invitation to spend the Easter weekend with the Connolly family at their winery, and Liam finds himself developing real affection for his fake boyfriend. But does Ambrose return those feelings, or is it all an act?
Horribly Harry
Bad Boyfriend, Inc-when you can't find a good boyfriend, why not hire a bad one instead? To supplement his income while he's completing his Early Education degree, Harry Townsend hires himself out as a terrible date-for a set fee, he'll horrify parents and family members in all sorts of interesting ways. But when it comes to actual relationships-and sex-Harry doesn't get the appeal. He doesn't get the same tingly feelings everyone else seems to when they meet someone attractive, and he's fine with that. He'd rather spend his evenings watching TV anyway. Jack Windsor abandoned his uni degree to do an apprenticeship as a mechanic, much to his parents' dismay. He's happy with his choices, but leaving uni meant losing his accommodation, and now he's crashing on his sister Mia's couch. It isn't ideal, but it's only until he finds something else-which is proving difficult in Sydney's brutal rental market. When Jack almost kills Harry with a strawberry smoothie, he discovers that not only was Harry's disastrous date with Mia a set up, but that Harry is looking for a roommate. Moving in with Harry is great, if only he wasn't so distractingly cute-and totally uninterested in Jack. Except as they grow closer as friends, for the first time in his life, Harry tells Jack he's developing feelings for him-tingly ones. But how can Harry and Jack be together when Jack's family thinks that Harry is the worst human being in the universe? And how can Jack convince them that his Bad Boyfriend is the best boyfriend he's ever had, without admitting that Mia hired him to be terrible to them? When an approaching family event brings everything to a head, Jack's going to have to step up to prove to Harry that he wants him in his life. And it might just take some bad timing, some good luck and the ugliest suit known to mankind.
Terribly Tristan
Bad Boyfriends, Inc—when you can’t find a good boyfriend, why not hire a bad one instead? Leo Fisher is the outward picture of respectability, just like his parents raised him to be. But when he inherits a crumbling terrace house from his great-uncle, he also inherits a tenant who turns his world upside down. Tristan is brazen, gorgeous, experienced and utterly fabulous. He’s everything Leo is not—so why is Leo drawn to him? Leo has always made the right choices—the sensible choices—yet here he is, hooking up with his tenant, who’s a rent boy. Tristan Montague is not a rent boy. Not exactly. He’s a bad boyfriend. For a fee, he’ll turn any date into the kind of disaster that will have his client’s unsuspecting parents begging them to date anyone but him. Boyfriending for cash is fun—but for real? No, thanks. Tristan doesn’t do relationships. Except when he meets his cute, awkward landlord Leo, Tristan finds himself rethinking his No Relationships rule. But in order for Leo to take a stand against his overbearing parents, Tristan will need to play the bad boyfriend one last time—and it’s going to have to be spectacular.