The Break-Up Clause
What if your work rival was the ex that you'd never actually broken up with?
'Sizzling' SOPHIE IRWIN
'Witty' BETH REEKLES
'Excellent' JANE CASEY
'Pitch-perfect' EMMA HUGHES
How do you get rid of an ex . . .
When you've never actually broken up?
When arrogant new colleague Benjamin swans into Fia's small office at her New York law firm, it's no secret they dislike - no, hate - each other. But there is one secret no one knows.
The last time Fia and Benjamin saw each other was one summer night nearly ten years ago, at a little chapel - in Vegas. Benjamin isn't just Fia's co-worker, he's also her long-lost husband.
They made a promise - they even signed a pact - that they'd divorce after one year. But they never did. Now, if anyone discovers they're husband and wife, both their jobs are on the line.
And as their marriage starts to finally heat up, it's a secret that's getting harder to keep . . .
EVERYONE LOVES THE BREAK-UP CLAUSE
'I REALLY loved . . . so clever, so good, really excellent characters' JANE CASEY
'Electric right from the off...a witty, wonderful book with such a wholesome take on friendships and a sizzling romance' BETH REEKLES
'Hargan has a light touch and a winning sense of humour' THE TIMES
'Reminds me of Katherine Heiny . . . her crisp scene-setting wit, her pitch-perfect ear for dialogue and her wonderful, wry eye . . . make every page a pleasure to read' EMMA HUGHES
'An absolute first class rom-com: smart, funny and sizzling with chemistry' SOPHIE IRWIN
'Joyous, funny and very sweet, this is one to savour' STYLIST
'One of the very best romcom writers around. It is sublime . . . chemistry/sizzle/snark is off the charts' CRESSIDA MCLAUGHLIN
Niamh Hargan was born and raised in Derry, Northern Ireland. An entertainment lawyer by profession, she first attended the Cannes Film Festival several years ago and found the experience to be both exactly like, and nothing at all like, what she had expected. When it became impossible to travel to Cannes in May 2020, she began to write about it instead.
Author: Niamh Hargan
Format: Paperback, 448 pages, 129mm x 198mm, 321 g
Published: 2023, HarperCollins Publishers, United Kingdom
Genre: Romance & Sagas
What if your work rival was the ex that you'd never actually broken up with?
'Sizzling' SOPHIE IRWIN
'Witty' BETH REEKLES
'Excellent' JANE CASEY
'Pitch-perfect' EMMA HUGHES
How do you get rid of an ex . . .
When you've never actually broken up?
When arrogant new colleague Benjamin swans into Fia's small office at her New York law firm, it's no secret they dislike - no, hate - each other. But there is one secret no one knows.
The last time Fia and Benjamin saw each other was one summer night nearly ten years ago, at a little chapel - in Vegas. Benjamin isn't just Fia's co-worker, he's also her long-lost husband.
They made a promise - they even signed a pact - that they'd divorce after one year. But they never did. Now, if anyone discovers they're husband and wife, both their jobs are on the line.
And as their marriage starts to finally heat up, it's a secret that's getting harder to keep . . .
EVERYONE LOVES THE BREAK-UP CLAUSE
'I REALLY loved . . . so clever, so good, really excellent characters' JANE CASEY
'Electric right from the off...a witty, wonderful book with such a wholesome take on friendships and a sizzling romance' BETH REEKLES
'Hargan has a light touch and a winning sense of humour' THE TIMES
'Reminds me of Katherine Heiny . . . her crisp scene-setting wit, her pitch-perfect ear for dialogue and her wonderful, wry eye . . . make every page a pleasure to read' EMMA HUGHES
'An absolute first class rom-com: smart, funny and sizzling with chemistry' SOPHIE IRWIN
'Joyous, funny and very sweet, this is one to savour' STYLIST
'One of the very best romcom writers around. It is sublime . . . chemistry/sizzle/snark is off the charts' CRESSIDA MCLAUGHLIN
Niamh Hargan was born and raised in Derry, Northern Ireland. An entertainment lawyer by profession, she first attended the Cannes Film Festival several years ago and found the experience to be both exactly like, and nothing at all like, what she had expected. When it became impossible to travel to Cannes in May 2020, she began to write about it instead.