Dating-ish, an all new standalone from the USA Today bestselling Knitting in the City romantic comedy series by Penny Reid is available now!
'Dating-ish' can be read as a standalone, is a full length 100k word novel, and is book #6 in the Knitting in the City Series.
There are three things you need to know about Marie Harris: 1) She's fed up with online dating, 2) She's so fed up, she's willing to forego the annoyance and consider more creative alternatives, and 3) She knows how to knit.
After the most bizarre and irritating first date in the history of humankind, Marie is looking for an alternative to men. With the help of her friends, she quickly identifies a few possibilities:
Need a cuddle? Use a professional cuddler. Need affirmation? Get yourself a life coach. Need an orgasm? Try orgasm meditation! Why does she need the hassle of a romantic partner when she can meet all her needs with paid services?
But then her irritating date resurfaces. And he's not at all the person she thought he was. And he suggests a different--and crazier--solution to her dilemma . . .
As everyone knows (or will soon come to realize), traditional relations between humans are a thing of the past. Robots are our future. And if robots are our future, then why do we need other people at all?
Excerpt:
He was quiet for bit, we both were, and I felt myself
relax more and more. His palm took a detour every so often, dutifully skipping
my hip and sliding along my side, and then back to my leg. Soon, I was so
relaxed I felt drowsy.
I felt fingers in my hair, moving the mass away from my
neck with treasuring strokes just before Matt nuzzled the back of my neck,
causing goosebumps to scatter over my skin.
“Mmm.” I smiled. “Hey. Jared said no tickling.” My voice
sounded sleepy.
“Does this tickle?” Matt asked softly, nuzzling me again.
I felt the brush of his lips—not a kiss, a brush—paired with hot breath against
the bare skin of my neck and a zing shot straight down my spine, making my toes
curl and a sudden hot ache twist in my lower belly.
Oh no.
I knew that ache. I hadn’t felt it because of another
person’s touch in quite a long time.
Nevertheless, no one ever forgets that
ache.
My back arched instinctively, my bottom pressing back
against his crotch, and I stiffened. I felt my nipples harden, strain beneath
the cotton of my bra. I was now fully awake. No longer drowsy.
Nope.
Not even a little.
Matt stiffened, too. His movements abruptly ceasing.
“Are you okay? What’s wrong?” he asked, alarm coating his
words, and in the next moment his hand was suspended in the air above me. “Did
I touch something I shouldn’t?”
I exhaled a short, nervous laugh, gripped by the urge to
sit up.
“No. No. You didn’t.” I moved to the edge of the bed,
righting myself, away from Matt, needing distance. “I’m good.” I gathered a
silent breath and released it slowly because my pulse was racing.
Crap, Marie. Get a grip. It’s Matt Simmons.
Professor Matt. The big kid. Why are you reacting this way?
“Did I . . .” These initial words were hesitant, and a
moment of silence stretched before he continued, his tone comically teasing as
he finished his thought. “Did I arouse you?”
I snorted, shaking my head, laughing at his silly tone.
Turning at the waist to peer at him over my shoulder, Matt was grinning at me,
twisting a make-believe mustache between his thumb and forefinger.
But then he stopped.
“I did, didn’t I?” he pushed, his hand dropping. He
looked pleased, if not a little amazed.
I sighed, feeling a smidge embarrassed, and nodded.
“Actually, yes. That’s a sensitive spot for most women.”
“The back of your neck?” He lifted himself to one elbow,
his eyes darting to my neck with keen interest.
“My neck in general, actually.”
“Huh.” Matt frowned thoughtfully. “Where else?”
I pressed my lips together and gave him an incredulous
look. “I’m not telling you that.”
“Why not?”
“Matt.”
“What if I needed it for research reasons?”
“Matt.”
“What if I told you it was part of our questionnaire?” He
tossed his legs over the side of the bed and stood, walking around to my side
and offering me his hand. “You should give me a schematic of your body with the
erogenous zones circled and rated.”
“Let me guess, you want them rated on a ten-point scale,”
I deadpanned as I accepted his hand, stood, and stepped away to gain some
distance and straighten my shirt.
He shrugged, crossing his arms, stalking after me. “Or
exponential. I was going to say a Likert scale, but a logarithmic scale works,
too.”
Chuckling, appreciative of his attempt to diffuse my
embarrassment and awkwardness with the joke, I realized Matt Simmons wasn’t a
bad guy. He might even be a good guy, just a little . . . peculiar.
And wants to replace romantic relationships
with robots. Best not forget that detail.
Yeah, he’d make an interesting friend.
“Thanks.” I gave him a small smile.
“For what?” His eyes moved between mine.
“For the cuddle. Thanks for the cuddle, Matt.”
“Anytime, Marie.” He grinned down at me, his eyes dancing
as he leaned forward and whispered, “Anytime.”
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Review by Gia:
Dating-ish is the first book that I have read in the Knitting in the City series. It can be read as a standalone. I wasn't lost reading it but I will check out the previous books because I want to know more about some of the characters. Marie has had some bad lick with dating. Her through an online service was really weird. She really a down to earth character. She's a journalist and she writing an article that explores things like professional cuddlers, orgasm meditation, and robots. She becomes friends with Matt. Matt is geeky and sexy. Matt is a bit odd. Sometimes I questioned whether Matt was an actual human. These two friends but slowly move to move. Matt was extremely slow to move to romance. I got a little bored at parts but then there were parts that pulled me back into the story. Matt's weirdness is really would kept me hooked.
4 Amazeballs Stars!
Meet Penny Reid:
Penny Reid is the USA Today Bestselling Author of the Winston Brothers and Knitting in the City series. When she’s not immersed in penning smart romances, Penny works in the biotech industry as a researcher. She’s also a full time mom to three diminutive adults, wife, daughter, knitter, crocheter, sewer, general crafter, and thought ninja.Connect with Penny:
Amazon: http://amzn.to/2lakzsD
Twitter: @ReidRomance
Newsletter: http://pennyreid.ninja/newsletter/
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