The Stand-In

RECOMMENDED: The Stand-In by Lily Chu is $2.24! This is a debut contemporary romance. Elyse gave this one an A:
So we have a celebrity romance, women being friends and helping each other with their mental health, and reflections on identity and community. That’s a lot to pack into a book, but it all works and delivered by Philippa Soo’s incredibly soothing voice, it was totally my jam.
How to upend your life:
–Get fired by gross, handsy boss
–Fail to do laundry (again)
–Be mistaken for famous Chinese actress
–Fall head-first into glitzy new worldGracie Reed is doing just fine. Sure, she was fired by her overly “friendly” boss, and yes, she still hasn’t gotten her mother into the nursing home of their dreams, but she’s healthy, she’s (somewhat) happy, and she’s (mostly) holding it all together.
But when a mysterious SUV pulls up beside her, revealing Chinese cinema’s golden couple Wei Fangli and Sam Yao, Gracie’s world is turned on its head. The famous actress has a proposition: Due to their uncanny resemblance, Fangli wants Gracie to be her stand-in. The catch? Gracie will have to be escorted by Sam, the most attractive—and infuriating—man Gracie’s ever met.
If it means getting the money she needs for her mother, Gracie’s in. Soon Gracie moves into a world of luxury she never knew existed. But resisting Sam, and playing the role of an elegant movie star, proves more difficult than she ever imagined—especially when she learns the real reason Fangli so desperately needs her help. In the end, all the lists in the world won’t be able to help Gracie keep up this elaborate ruse without losing herself… and her heart.
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RECOMMENDED: Siren Queen by Nghi Vo is $2.99! Carrie gave this one an A:
While I think Siren Queen will be especially beloved by movie buffs, it can be enjoyed by anyone. I loved the atmosphere, the relationships, the main character, and the integration of magic into the setting and the theme. Two thumbs up, as they used to say!
From award-winning author Nghi Vo comes a dazzling new novel where immortality is just a casting call away.
It was magic. In every world, it was a kind of magic.
“No maids, no funny talking, no fainting flowers.” Luli Wei is beautiful, talented, and desperate to be a star. Coming of age in pre-Code Hollywood, she knows how dangerous the movie business is and how limited the roles are for a Chinese American girl from Hungarian Hill—but she doesn’t care. She’d rather play a monster than a maid.
But in Luli’s world, the worst monsters in Hollywood are not the ones on screen. The studios want to own everything from her face to her name to the women she loves, and they run on a system of bargains made in blood and ancient magic, powered by the endless sacrifice of unlucky starlets like her. For those who do survive to earn their fame, success comes with a steep price. Luli is willing to do whatever it takes—even if that means becoming the monster herself.
Siren Queen offers up an enthralling exploration of an outsider achieving stardom on her own terms, in a fantastical Hollywood where the monsters are real and the magic of the silver screen illuminates every page.
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RECOMMENDED: Pretty Little Wife by Darby Kane is $2.99! Elyse reviewed this one and gave it an A:
The story is really a cat-and-mouse game between Lila and Aaron (or whoever moved him), Lila and the police, and Lila and Aaron’s friends and family. It’s layers upon layers of deception, plots, counter-plots, and moments where I thought I figured out what was happening and was wrong.
That’s all I can really say without spoiling this wonderful, twisty thriller. Just trust me. You’ll love it.
Debut author Darby Kane thrills with this twisty domestic suspense novel that asks one central question: shouldn’t a dead husband stay dead?
Lila Ridgefield lives in an idyllic college town, but not everything is what it seems. Lila isn’t what she seems.A student vanished months ago. Now, Lila’s husband, Aaron, is also missing. At first these cases are treated as horrible coincidences until it’s discovered the student is really the third of three unexplained disappearances over the last few years. The police are desperate to find the connection, if there even is one. Little do they know they might be stumbling over only part of the truth….
With the small town in an uproar, everyone is worried about the whereabouts of their beloved high school teacher. Everyone except Lila, his wife. She’s definitely confused about her missing husband but only because she was the last person to see his body, and now it’s gone.
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Never Fall for Your Fiancee by Virginia Heath is $2.99! This is book one in the Merriwell Sisters historical romance series. I’m not loving these illustrated covers and I feel like I tend to be cool with them more than most readers.
The first in a new historical rom-com series, a handsome earl hires a fake fiancée to keep his matchmaking mother at bay, but hilarity ensues when love threatens to complicate everything.
The last thing Hugh Standish, Earl of Fareham, ever wants is a wife. Unfortunately for him, his mother is determined to find him one, even from across the other side of the ocean. So, Hugh invents a fake fiancée to keep his mother’s matchmaking ways at bay. But when Hugh learns his interfering mother is on a ship bound for England, he realizes his complicated, convoluted but convenient ruse is about to implode. Until he collides with a beautiful woman, who might just be the miracle he needs.
Minerva Merriwell has had to struggle to support herself and her two younger sisters ever since their feckless father abandoned them. Work as a woodcut engraver is few and far between, and the Merriwell sisters are nearly penniless. So, when Hugh asks Minerva to pose as his fiancée while his mother is visiting, she knows that while the scheme sounds ludicrous, the offer is too good to pass up.
Once Minerva and her sisters arrive at Hugh’s estate, of course, nothing goes according to his meticulous plan. As hilarity and miscommunication ensue, while everyone tries to keep their tangled stories straight, Hugh and Minerva’s fake engagement starts to turn into a real romance. But can they trust each other, when their relationship started with a lie?
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I had ‘Siren Queen’ on my wishlist, which I check every day because gourd knows you can’t have too many books, so I snapped it up yesterday when I saw the price drop. But ‘The Stand-In’ was also a ‘hmm that sounds good’ so it’s my one-click du jour. 🙂 Yay! More books!
The Regency: has anyone ever written a Regency romance in which the titled hero actually *wants* to get married? It’s hella hard work running and representing a big estate; most titled men during the Regency might not’ve wanted a wife for luuurve but I’m pretty sure most of them thought they *needed* one.
The Stand In is so good. I stayed up far too late finishing it.
@chacha1 I have certainly read books where the hero is out to “pick a wife,” but the scenario there is that he wants the most upstanding wife, but the heroine is from a scandal-prone family OR an heiress but the heroine is poor OR someone he will never fall in love with, and he’s too attracted to the heroine OR someone with an impeccable bloodline, but the heroine is an American heiress… or some combination of the above (I’m looking at you, The Viscount Who Loved Me). Whatever he’s looking for, she’s not it.
I have also read a few where the hero wants to get married, wants to get married to the heroine, and the drama happens after the wedding, so they are out there. Eloisa James loves this set-up. Lisa Kleypas has a couple too, I think; she has definitely done marriage of convenience (in Devil in Winter St. Vincent very much wants to get married to a rich woman, and Evie volunteers).
@chacha1, I enjoyed The Bride Takes a Groom (Lisa Berne) in part because it upends that trope in interesting ways. IIRC, the groom is titled but poor, but wants to have a happy marriage like his parents did, and the bride is rich and resents that she lacks control over her life/future. Not super angsty, as I recall, but emotional in a way I really liked.