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Let's Kiss and Tell

Not yet published
Expected 11 Aug 26
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Fall for the brand-new sexy, sweet and heart aching romance from the bestselling author of It's Different This Time!

📝 Workplace romance
📝 Fake dating
📝 90's romcom nostalgia
📝 Spice

------------------------------

Lucy Reid's about to fake it.


As a sex columnist, her views on relationships aren't exactly optimistic.

Instead, she encourages readers to embrace their sexuality and that you don't need a partner to be happy. But when her team claims that all their readers are in relationships, and that it might be time for something - or someone - new, she's got to act fast.

Enter Marshall Oakley.

Marshall is the new Senior News Writer at Lucy's company, and he's just confessed to needing a girlfriend for his ex's wedding. Faking a relationship is perfect. Marshall can finally prove he's moved on, and Lucy can write about finding 'the one' only to break up and prove to readers - and her bosses - that relationships don't solve everything.

But spending lots of time together and faking affection has lines blurring... And now the two of them must find the courage to rewrite their story with a happily ever after.

-----------------------

PRAISE FOR JOSS


'IT'S DIFFERENT THIS TIME is a witty, warm, heart-aching masterclass in romance. Richard wrote a book you'll be sad to finish.' - Autumn Woods, Sunday Times bestselling author

'The rich, decadent romance of the year we've been waiting for!' - Sarah Adams, NYT bestselling author
'Deeply emotional and layered, this second-chance romance is an instant classic!'-Naina Kumar, USA Today bestselling author of Flirting With Disaster

'A tender and atmospheric slowburn-this is a book you can't stop thinking about'-Amy Lea, international bestselling author of The Catch

464 pages, Paperback

Expected publication August 11, 2026

4204 people want to read

About the author

Joss Richard

3 books912 followers

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5 stars
74 (43%)
4 stars
70 (41%)
3 stars
21 (12%)
2 stars
4 (2%)
1 star
1 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 151 reviews
Profile Image for ahmeeka.
196 reviews
April 28, 2026
[arc review] I finished this last night and felt stuck on my overall opinion of it. I struggled to get through the first ~33%, and while it did pick up, I don’t really know if this was for me. I think it’s probably a 2.5* rounded down!

let’s kiss and tell follows lucy and marsh in a dual pov. lucy is a sex writer who is trying to keep her job amid layoffs within her company, and marsh is the new senior writer looking for a date to his ex girlfriend’s wedding.

the story was fleshed out, which I did enjoy because it didn’t feel rushed and choppy. I loved the tension between lucy and marsh, and how their relationship was a slow burn.

I will, however, say that I finished not really knowing much about marsh? I do think that might be intentional, because his life revolved around writing (which became a plot point) but the only thing marsh and lucy had in common was their jobs?

I did find myself relating to lucy and how she’s anxious avoidant, and I felt connected to her in that way. I don’t really know? maybe I need to reread properly when it’s released?

I really enjoyed joss richard’s first novel, but I just don’t think this book was for me. that’s not to say it’s not good, because I know a lot of people will enjoy it and love it! I’m just probably in the minority, and I’m sad I didn’t enjoy it the way I thought I would.

at the end of the day, joss is and forever will be one of my auto buy authors, and I look forward to whatever she releases in the future!

thank you headline eternal for the advance reader copy in exchange for an honest review!
Profile Image for Mai ༊*·˚.
337 reviews351 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
May 7, 2026
4.25 ★— Move along, Carrie Bradshaw! There’s a new sex columnist in town.

For 2/3rds of this book, I was fully bespelled, as this story features one of my favorite heroine types in romance: the avoidant commitment-phobe.
I love reading about women who have to wrestle with themselves to open up and admit that they’re falling in love, and with Lucy Reid, we get a protagonist who matches that perfectly.

She and Marsh meet and embark on a How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days-esque adventure, with her needing a fake boyfriend to write more about relationship issues in her column and him needing a date for his ex-girlfriend’s wedding.

The story did a really good job of letting the two get to know each other, their chemistry really feeling off the charts as they went on dates, bantered, and had insaaane sexual tension. I can't emphasize enough how much I liked the scenes that built up their desire for each other and how well the author portrayed them as truly losing it for each other once they both gave in.

Now, let me get to the last 3rd of the book that sort of woke me from my reading euphoria. Marsh and Lucy get into an argument that I honestly thought felt rushed and… weirdly corny? There was a moment where Lucy attacked Marsh on the basis of him being a news journalist, saying that he was doing that because he couldn’t write personal stuff, and all of that felt so out of left field to me, as their different writing careers had never really been a point of contention between them before, which all contributed to this defining fight feeling contrived and hamfisted.

It felt like the book veered into a more schmaltzy direction that I hadn't really felt prior to this point and... I don't know why exactly, but the last few articles and bits of dialogue between Marsh and Lucy started to read like a cliché romance mishmash that dampened my love for their love a little.

I still really liked this as my introduction to Joss Richard (though… the name Marsh is something I never warmed up to, sorry!), and I am absolutely adding her to my short list of treasured contemporary romance writers.

___________

Thank you to Dell for the ARC.
Profile Image for Dab.
523 reviews429 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
April 17, 2026
So, after long and difficult consideration, I decided to give this book three stars. I love this author’s writing, and I loved these characters (at least for the first ~65% of the book), so this feels fair.

(I might still change my mind, though…)

I fell in love with this book. At first sight.

But then it broke my heart.


(Or should I say, made me throw up in my mouth a little?)

Marsh was such a perfect book boyfriend, I wanted to hug him and hold him. Their chemistry was chef’s kiss, and the first half of this book gets all the stars from me. All of them!

Marsh and Lucy’s dynamic was so well crafted that I couldn’t stop reading. She was pure chaos, bursting with energy and joy. Marsh was quiet and hardworking, a little cautious, but with a heart of pure gold. He was just enjoying Lucy’s company, not trying to tame her, just admiring her and recognizing how smart and brave she was. It was magic. Their banter! Her randomly talking about sex in public and his shocked reactions made me cackle multiple times. It was so much fun to read!



So yeah, how do I rate the first half five stars and the second half two?

Thanks to Headline and NetGalley for the arc, all opinions are my own.
Profile Image for cat.
273 reviews74 followers
pre-releases
March 30, 2026
・❥・⁀➷ pre-release

please please PLEASE let me be accepted for this arc. Joss Richard made it into my top 3 new authors of last year and I was OBSESSED with her debut. I can’t wait for this one🤞🏼🥹

Profile Image for angelinabvby ۶۟ৎ .
184 reviews128 followers
Want to Read
April 19, 2026
ꨄ 𝕡𝕣𝕖𝕣𝕖𝕒𝕕 💋
ARC APPROVED FOR THIS ADORABLE BOOK WITH ITS ADORABLE COVER 💖💗🥰💞
Profile Image for tanvi.
216 reviews34 followers
April 1, 2026
“𝘊𝘢𝘯 𝘐 𝘵𝘦𝘭𝘭 𝘺𝘰𝘶 𝘸𝘩𝘢𝘵 𝘵𝘩𝘦 𝘣𝘰𝘰𝘬 𝘵𝘪𝘵𝘭𝘦 𝘪𝘴?” “𝘠𝘰𝘶 𝘭𝘢𝘯𝘥𝘦𝘥 𝘰𝘯 𝘰𝘯𝘦?” “𝘔𝘩𝘮.” 𝘚𝘩𝘦 𝘯𝘰𝘥𝘴 𝘭𝘪𝘬𝘦 𝘢 𝘬𝘪𝘥 𝘬𝘦𝘦𝘱𝘪𝘯𝘨 𝘢 𝘴𝘦𝘤𝘳𝘦𝘵. “𝘖𝘬𝘢𝘺, 𝘳𝘦𝘢𝘥𝘺?” “𝘐’𝘮 𝘳𝘦𝘢𝘥𝘺.” “𝘓𝘦𝘵’𝘴 𝘒𝘪𝘴𝘴 𝘢𝘯𝘥 𝘛𝘦𝘭𝘭.”

Lucy, our beloved sex columnist, and Marsh, a news reporter with his slutty tortoiseshell glasses, have the most charming meet-cute at a work happy hour. What starts as a chance encounter quickly turns into a mutually beneficial arrangement: they agree to fake date since he needs a convincing plus-one for his ex’s wedding, and she needs a relationship to satisfy her editor and keep her job.

I genuinely thought this book has everything I look for in a great romance. It’s full of heart, depth, and layered, complex emotions. It is one of those books you’ll either completely fall for or not connect with at all.

Lucy and Marsh are both commitment-phobes, but for entirely different reasons, and one is clearly more afraid than the other. Because of that, mistakes are inevitable, but I really appreciated how Joss never lets their conflict feel juvenile. They’re both deeply prideful, which leads to some painful, honest conversations, but never veers into spitefulness, which is a difficult balance that’s handled so well. Even at their most complicated, as they try to make sense of what their relationship could be, you can feel how much they care for each other. I have zero notes and am so excited for everyone else to experience this story too.

Thank you Netgalley and Dell Romance for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Sarah.
310 reviews149 followers
ebook-tbr
April 5, 2026
I did NOT like the author's debut, but I want to give her books a second chance, so I was sooo happy when I was approved to read this. God, I hope I love it. 😭🤞🏼
Profile Image for Sian.
506 reviews633 followers
April 14, 2026
I will write a proper critical review in a few days but for now I will say this: I am crushed that I didn’t love this.

Also, there’s a line in the epilogue where the fmc playfully rubs the mmc’s dick and it’s made me drop this from a 3.5 to a 3 star read because it’s icked me out.

---

I'm so sad to say this one didn't work for me. And not necessarily because I had a bad time reading or that I thought the book was bad but rather that I thought the message about love to be quite muddy and unclear.

Our FMC is very sure she doesn't want a relationship but rather than seeming independant she comes off as slightly hypocritical as the story progresses. Her issues which are presented originally as incredibly logical, honest and subversive. Despite the relationship seeming destined to end in flames, they fall in love and get some therapy and all of sudden love really is amazing and she was just scared. I almost found it offensive, if I'm being honest. It felt like it was being implied that anyone who isn't interested in relationships is to be pitied and must clearly be hiding some sort of deep hurt (which, for our FMC was a misunderstanding anyway).

I'm sure that wasn't the authors intention but that element hindering my enjoyment and the fact that the pacing was a little inconsistent, led me to rate this a 3.5 stars. I'm a Joss Richard lover for life and I cannot wait for the rest of her novels. However, this one just isn't for me.

Thank you to Netgalley and Ballentine for this e-arc, I am extremely grateful.
Profile Image for Annie K.
201 reviews9 followers
April 13, 2026
Lucy Reid is a sex writer who doesn’t do relationships. Unfortunately for her, her column is losing clicks—readers want more than hookups; they want the messy reality of love. So what’s the solution? Agree to be Marsh’s date to his ex’s wedding in exchange for fake dating him. No one’s going to catch feelings… right?

This book really ebbed and flowed for me. At times it was addictive—I couldn’t put it down. Other parts dragged, and the pacing felt uneven. I think my biggest struggle was with the core emotional arc. Lucy’s fear of love is the central conflict, but it started to feel repetitive, like the same argument playing out over and over without meaningful progression.

Marsh, unfortunately, didn’t fully work for me as a romantic lead. The book asks the reader to see him as this amazing, emotionally evolved partner, but I never quite got there. His backstory—especially the way his previous long-term relationship was handled—left me feeling like his growth wasn’t fully earned. The narrative framing felt a bit off, and I found myself questioning the emotional accountability on both sides rather than rooting for them as a couple.

The “forbidden workplace romance” element also didn’t land for me. It felt a bit outdated and overly dramatized in a way that didn’t match real-world dynamics, which pulled me out of the story.

I will say, I was really enjoying this up until about the 75% mark. After that, it started to feel repetitive and less emotionally grounded, and the romance lost some of its believability for me. The spicy scenes, while very explicit, sometimes felt out of sync with the emotional development, which made them land less effectively than intended.

And on a completely different note—lobster rolls in San Francisco? That might have been the most unrealistic part of the whole book. Cioppino, oysters, clam chowder… sure. But lobster rolls? I could practically tell the author didn’t live in California 😅

I really wanted to love this one, but in the end, it just didn’t fully come together for me.

Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for the eARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Kaitlyn.
390 reviews60 followers
Want to Read
April 16, 2026
!!!! Another Joss book around my birthday 😭

omg release date moved up. You can bet I'll be knocking on Dell's door the second this arc is out.

I am giddy over this e-arc approval. THANK YOU DELL, ILYSM.
Profile Image for Maureen.
201 reviews1 follower
April 3, 2026
4,5⭐️

Joss Richard broke my heart then put it back together

🇬🇧🇫🇷

At first, I wasn’t sure I would fall in love with this story. The premise felt a bit too familiar. I mean, the classic “fake-dating to bring to your ex’s wedding” trope has been done so many times that I didn’t expect it to stand out. But I couldn’t have been more wrong, this book is everything.

First of all, Marsh is the ultimate green flag. I’ve read a lot of books, but I’ve never come across a boyfriend this perfect, and not in a boring, unrealistic way. Marsh is genuinely kind, with a fully developed personality. He’s insecure, he doubts himself, yet he cares so deeply for the people he loves. He feels incredibly real. Honestly, I just wanted to hug him and tell him he deserves all the happiness in the world.

I also really loved Lucy. She has a strong personality and, yes, she frustrated me at times but that’s what made her feel authentic. She’s a good person navigating complicated emotions, and I appreciated that depth. Marsh and Lucy are so different, yet they fit together perfectly, it just makes sense.

Once again, I completely fell for Joss Richard’s writing. Her banter is unmatched, seriously I was sweating and they were only touching hands ! She creates tension so effortlessly. I adore her books and already can’t wait to see what she writes next 💓

Why you should read this book:
📝 Workplace romance
📝 Fake dating
📝 90s romcom nostalgia
📝 Spice (beautifully written you’ll definitely want more)

PS: It comes out in August so don’t miss it !

——

Au début, je n’étais pas certaine d’adorer cette histoire. Le résumé me paraissait un peu trop classique et le trope du « fake-dating pour ne pas venir seul au mariage de son ex », je l’ai déjà vu tellement de fois que je pensais ne pas être particulièrement touchée. Mais je me trompais complètement : ce livre est absolument incroyable.

D’abord, parlons de Marsh. C’est le green flag ultime. J’ai lu énormément de romances, mais je n’ai jamais croisé un bookboyfriend aussi parfait, et pas dans le sens ennuyeux ou irréaliste. Marsh est profondément gentil, avec une vraie personnalité. Il est rempli de doutes et d’insécurités mais il aime sincèrement et intensément. J’avais tellement envie de le prendre dans mes bras et de lui dire qu’il mérite tout le bonheur du monde.

J’ai aussi beaucoup aimé Lucy. Elle a un caractère fort et, oui, elle m’a parfois un peu déçue mais c’est justement ce qui la rend crédible. C’est une bonne personne, pleine de contradictions et d’émotions complexes. Marsh et Lucy sont très différents, mais ils sont faits l’un pour l’autre, ça ne fait aucun doute.

Encore une fois, je suis tombée amoureuse de la plume de Joss Richard. La tension qu’elle transmet est absolument parfaite, j’étais en train de fondre alors qu’ils se frôlaient juste la main ! Elle sait créer une tension romantique comme personne. J’adore ses livres et j’ai déjà hâte de découvrir le prochain 💓

Thank you to NetGalley and Headline for the ARC 🫶🏼
Profile Image for daisy.
408 reviews1,055 followers
May 4, 2026
4.5 Joss Richard’s sophomore book, Let’s Kiss and Tell, is fun and empowering, and it perfectly encapsulates the feeling of an early 2000’s romcom.

Lucy is a sex and relationship columnist at a digital magazine, and with every story she writes, she highlights the fact that women do not necessarily need a partner to be happy. From the very first chapter, it’s made abundantly clear that Lucy is ambitious and hard-working, and that she will not let anything get in the way of succeeding at her job. So when she is faced with a dropping number of readers, a semi-unhappy boss, and potential layoffs in the near future, she knows she has to do something drastic to turn things around. And when you don’t have any of your own relationship experience to write about, what better way to go about it all than to find yourself a fake boyfriend? Enter Marsh; The new senior news writer who very conveniently also happens to need a date for his ex-girlfriend’s wedding. His reasons are different from hers, but he is as much of a commitment-phobe as Lucy is. So on paper, nothing could go wrong here, right?

One of my favourite things about this book is how Joss Richard has done such a wonderful job at portraying a confident, strong, and career-driven woman. There really isn’t anything I love more in a book than a well-written female main character. Lucy is fun, driven, and a bit chaotic, but as the story progresses, we see a softer and more vulnerable side of her as well. We get an insight into her thoughts and turmoil, and we are presented with the mental challenges she has faced and the choices she has made as a direct consequence of her childhood. I loved getting to witness the development of her character, and I especially loved how she changed throughout the story without losing herself in the process.

Opposite Lucy, we have Marsh. On the surface, he is seen as pretty serious and closed off, but we, as readers, and Lucy see a very different side of him. It felt really refreshing to read about a man who wasn’t afraid to word exactly what he wanted, and at the same time didn’t shy away from showing his softer and gentler side.

Because we see Lucy and Marsh slowly grow closer as friends and connect during their fake dating scheme, the progression of their relationship feels natural and realistic. And as both characters bring their own flaws, messiness, and past trauma to the situation, everything going down between them, every action and reaction, feels so rooted in reality.

This truly was a beautiful love story, and I cannot wait to get my hands on a physical copy.

The publisher very kindly provided this arc through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Rachel.
61 reviews5 followers
April 23, 2026
This is such a hard book to review. I am positive there will be people who enjoy and maybe even rave over it… I’m just not one of them. I had high expectations going in because I truly LOVED this authors debut novel. However, this one felt vastly different. I could see the story’s potential… underlying threads of a bigger message but we never really got there. The FMC had a real chance to be something special, to show off that people’s judgements based off her profession were unfounded. Yet that’s not the direction the story went? Lucy consistently proved those assumptions right with her behaviors and actions and I found myself beyond irritated and a bit disappointed. Everything about the two main character’s relationship and emotional maturity irked me and for people who are supposedly 29 and 36 it just felt off. Another thing that didn’t work for me was the spice… personal preference but I do not in fact want to read about two people treating each other as if it’s just sex. I pick up romances for the relationships and this just felt backwards and at times extremely distasteful. Again, I think I just wasn’t the intended audience for this particular story. I still love the authors previous work … I’ll just be more cautious picking up others in the future.

Thank you to Ballantine for the advanced copy. I’m bummed it wasn’t for me in the end. 😅 All thoughts and opinions are my own and this is my voluntary review.
Profile Image for Claudia G.
331 reviews37 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
April 30, 2026
A workplace romance, they’re both writers, and fake dating?? Sign me up!! Ok I was hooked throughout the entire book. There were many moments that had me giggling. It is very different to Joss Richard’s debut novel but still so good. She has become a new favorite author for me.

Lucy and Marsh were both characters that felt real to me. They had things they were working through in their personal lives. I really liked the cute and fun dates they went on. You could feel their chemistry. I loved their banter and found myself smiling at their interactions. The small gestures from both of them in some moments were sweet and thoughtful.

There were a couple moments where Lucy and Marsh’s actions frustrated me and had me confused but I won’t go too much into it to not spoil.

Regardless, I overall still really enjoyed this.

Thank you Dell Romance and Netgalley for the arc.
Profile Image for lali ✰.
326 reviews29 followers
arc-tbr
April 19, 2026
what should I do to get an ARC???? i'm dying here!!!!!

*uptade*
I GOT THE ARC!!!!!!
Profile Image for Sara ➽ Ink Is My Sword.
646 reviews496 followers
Want to Read
April 8, 2026
i feel like crying, omg. i got an arc!! it's different this time was one of my top books of last year. cannot wait for this AHHHHHHHHHHHH 💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕

Thank you to Netgalley and the Publisher for an ARC of this book.
Profile Image for Jenna.
77 reviews
April 17, 2026
This was SUCH a wonderful take on the fake-dating trope. Lucy’s confidence in herself but anxiety about her job was so real and relatable in this world and then how she’s managed to own her role and choices as an experienced woman but then has to discover what intimacy actually is?! 🤌🏼 that delineation is something so often left out of romance books. Like the way these two characters so believably fell in love in the everyday minutiae of life could’ve been boring but was just enchanting. Which brings us to green flag, sexy glasses, drives a Bronco but not in a dick way, Marsh. The one thing I had to get my head around was that nickname because it just wasn’t my favorite name but I thought it was cute that he also called her Luce. A MMC who is such a supportive feminist and also vulnerable enough to finally (after some legit and real stubborn denial) recognize his own issues and overcome them while also still being a sexy man. And the scene in the car where she desensitizes him to saying dirty words 🤭 I can’t adequately explain how much this book surprised me with how much I loved it.

I can’t believe I hadn’t read Joss Richard’s first book. Just grabbed this off Edelweiss cause it was a cute title and cover! Thanks to the publisher for the ARC. All opinions are my own. Now I’m going to go read her first book!
Profile Image for Tyre &#x1f352;.
128 reviews17 followers
May 1, 2026
I absolutely adored Joss Richard’s debut novel and I was SO excited to read her second book! I can say that I really enjoyed this one! 🩷

here we have a story where both main characters are writers. lucy is a sex and relationship columnist and marsh is a news writer. lucy is someone who has never been in a serious relationship and doesn’t ever want to be in one. and marsh is someone who within the last year has gotten out of a long term relationship. they both have some baggage, but their chemistry is absolutely undeniable. lucy is needing to branch out of her current stories and write more about relationships, and marsh is needing a date to his ex’s wedding. so they decide to enter a fake dating arrangement.

the story was so intriguing and I couldn’t put it down, I binged it within two days. I thought it was so different from anything I’ve read and I really enjoyed that. lucy and marsh are dealing with some very real feelings and this story shows the real raw emotions and how they try to navigate them. their decisions were sometimes frustrating but I think that’s what made them feel so real! they both had a lot of depth to them individually and I loved that it was dual pov because I think it helped a lot more with that depth.

now the chemistry? whew, so HOT 🥵 I was giggling and kicking my feet 🤭

• fake dating
• workplace romance
• sex columnist x news writer
• only one bed
• dual pov

I also really LOVED the addition of getting to see the stories that they’ve written! overall an amazing read! 🥰

thank you so much netgalley and dell for the arc! 🩷
Profile Image for Aylin.
209 reviews1 follower
April 24, 2026
Lucy is a sex writer and she is decidedly anti-relationships. When her boss tells her to switch it up and write about being in a relationship to appeal to a bigger audience, Lucy, who has never been in a relationship, decides to fake date Marsh, a news writer at the sister company, who also happens to need a fake-date for his ex’s wedding, for inspiration.

The plot sounded so promising and fun, two writers, fake dating and an empowered FMC. However, I simply could not get into the story.

Both main characters have their reservations about being in a relationship and those reasons, along with the „forbidden work place“ romance are presenting the central conflicts in the book. Sadly, it felt repetitive at some point. They would acknowledge the love they have for the other, and in the next paragraph completely dismiss it and come up with a reason why it wouldn‘t work. I get it. But you do this once, maybe twice, and not repeatedly, imo. It just didn‘t work for me.

Additionally, the forbidden aspect of the relationship is constantly brought up but at the end, it has absolutely no relevance? They just disregard it, don‘t talk about it etc. as if it wasn‘t a main conflict?

Now, this is just my opinion on it and an explanation why it didn‘t work for me. I don‘t think it is a bad book and did not hate it! It‘s more that I feel indifferent towards it, I could have stopped reading at any point and not pick it up again and I would have been fine.
However, Marsh and Lucy were both well-fleshed out characters with emotional depth and I do think they work well together.

Thank you to NetGalley and Headline Books for an earc in exchange for an honest review!
Profile Image for Rebecca Buddenbohn.
185 reviews3 followers
Read
April 12, 2026
4.5 ⭐️ rounded 🆙 because my girl Joss knows what she’s doiiinngggg!!!

In short, I loved this book.
It is SO different from her debut ‘It’s Different This Time’ but still has Richard’s distinct voice.

The most intriguing part? This is like the anti-miscommunication trope while still making you feel the frustrations that come with the miscommunication trope (complimentary)

I think this book will make some people uncomfortable, given the premise / topics discussed, & I honestly think that made me love it even more. Sex is inherently such a huge part of life & relationships, & whereas the topic has grown in popularity over the last decade especially… I still think there is a large group of people who view it as something that should remain private. But there is such POWER is having open + honest conversations surrounding sex. ESPECIALLY with your chosen partner. I think this book explores that so well & leans toward empowering people over embarrassing them.

Lucy & Marsh worked so so well together. I think their story is one that will leave an impression & get people having harder conversations both with themselves & the people they love.

Splendid work 👏🏼
Profile Image for Bris.reads.and.recs.
22 reviews2 followers
May 6, 2026
I’ve been SUPER psyched for Joss’s upcoming novel, especially after reading It’s Different This Time—and I can confidently say that Let’s Kiss and Tell lived up to ALL of my expectations.

It’s literally the perfect blend of Nobody Wants This and How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days. And as someone who’s watched both a gazillion times… Joss absolutely delivers, and in the best way!

The banter and chemistry are GOLDEN, and the emotions run from high to low—there’s just never a dull moment. And yet, what I appreciate most is its sex-positive look at love, relationships, growth, and empowerment. That’s exactly why I love Joss’s writing. Her ability to write about diverse/sensitive topics and carefully weave them into her books keeps me excited for what she writes next.

But I truly couldn’t have asked for a better story, and it makes me very excited for you guys to meet Marsh and Lucy. It’s all around perfect for those who love slow-burn tension, blurred lines, and that mix of humor and vulnerability.
Profile Image for Katie.
30 reviews2 followers
April 27, 2026
I was worried that Joss Richard's second book wouldn't live up to how much I loved her debut, but I can happily say that 'Let's Kiss and Tell' delivered! This one is a totally different premise with completely separate characters. It's a completely different book, and I LIKE IT THAT WAY.

It's giving '00s rom-com. It's giving How To Lose A Guy In 10 Days. It's giving yet another perfect man written by a woman. (Hi Marsh and your slutty little glasses!)

One more thing (SPOILERS AHEAD):

I saw a few reviews that were annoyed or taken out of the story because of the other people the two main characters are sleeping with, and I am just like...has no one ever been in a real, messy relationship? Also, the moment with Marsh near the end was to show. him. Lucy's. perspective. on. sex. and help him understand how she saw the world! Sometimes, we have to make mistakes in the messiest ways to help find ourselves and bring us back to the people we are meant to be with.

Anyways, I loved this one a lot, I love Joss' writing style, and she will now be an auto-buy for me!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Jess Hilbert.
203 reviews5 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
May 1, 2026
This one started off so fun. The rom-com energy had me smiling right away, playful, a little sharp, and exactly what I was hoping for.

Marshall and Lucy worked really well for me. He’s self-aware but a little caught up in how he’s perceived, and she’s the complete opposite, using that “I don’t care” energy as a shield. Watching them meet in the middle, especially in a fake relationship where they could just be real with each other, felt really refreshing.

The second half shifts into deeper, heavier territory, which I can appreciate for the character growth… but it lost some of the humor and spark that made the beginning so fun. I definitely missed that lightness.

Still, strong chemistry, great side characters, and a dynamic that really worked. I just wish it had kept a bit more of that original charm all the way through. 💛
Profile Image for Lyndsay.
267 reviews21 followers
May 10, 2026
Joss Richard is quickly becoming one of my automatic go in blind, immediately purchase authors after this one and It’s Different This Time. This one kept me invested the whole way through, and I’m always weak for fake dating + one bed in the hotel. The spice was probably a 3/5 for me: enough to be fun without completely overtaking the story. 
Profile Image for Kate.
171 reviews9 followers
April 3, 2026
Thank you Dell for an advanced copy via NetGalley! All opinions are my own.

Joss Richard has done it again!! This was an excellent read, filled with so many fun and heartfelt moments. I loved Lucy and Marsh so much. Lucy was an exceptionally cool character and I thought she was really well written. I loved the whole summer-y vibe of this book. I thought the fake dating aspect was really well done and this is definitely one of the best fake dating scenarios I’ve read. I absolutely loved this book!!!!! If you want a book that feels like summer and 1989 by Taylor Swift, you need to check this one out!
144 reviews
Read
March 31, 2026
I have to think of how I want to rate this. Most of it was a solid 4 stars. The writing was better than her debut. I liked Lucy and Marsh (hate his nickname though). I loved that the FMC was half-Filipino again. I especially loved how the book got right to the plot, instead of dragging it like some other books do. But if I thought Lucy having sex with someone else 64% in was bad, Marsh having sex with another woman at 94% is diabolical. I hate that in a romance.

thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for an arc in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for alicia.
235 reviews17 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
April 10, 2026
Ive been sobbing for an hour straight so let me come back to this when i can actually see my screen🥲

Hi I’m back and cried through writing this review (essay):

Oh my god where do I even START. I LOVED this book. So much, more than this review will do justice. Joss Richard is a gift to the romance genre, her writing transports you into the world like no other. She writes these heart wrenching, beautiful, sweet, emotional stories and I thank her everyday for taking the leap into this career.

I went into this book expecting something fun and sexy with a few emotional discussions as the characters begin to open up. WRONG. This book caused me DEHYDRATION with the amount of tears I cried. This book handled some tougher topics, and these characters had a lot of backstory that made them the way they are and led them to do the things they do. But it was also HOT! And filled to the brim with banter, hot foreplay, and very delicious sex scenes. These two characters genuinely are some of the hottest characters I’ve read. Every description of them had me wanting both of them in a pretty big way.

Lucy Reid, sex columnist, doesn’t believe in love, she doesn’t want to fall in love, she believes all love ends in heartbreak. I like to say I see myself a lot in Lucy. So many of my tears were shed during her inner monologue because of how much I related to the way she thought about love and relationships. Her parent’s relationship shaped a lot of how she viewed these things, and though my parents relationship could not be more different, it also caused the same emotional damage. While I see so much of myself in Lucy, I also don’t at all and I think that really speaks to the layers of her character. Lucy finds her outlet in casual sex and dating, never going beyond a few dates or casual hookups. I think the way Joss portrays this in her character is very deep and meaningful. She’s careful around thee topic while also removing the stigma that women are “sluts” for wanting casual sex.

Marshall mf Oakley. Marsh, my gentle sweet caring baby, I love you. A man who seems serious, and buttoned up. A man who takes his career very seriously. But behind it all is a man who’s hurt and refuses to let anyone else know. A man who pours himself into his job so he doesn’t have to deal with any of the hurt he has festering under the surface. He is sweet and kind and truly just wants to be LOVED and to give LOVE. Marsh’s story was deep. His past was something I wasn’t expecting, and was the cause of a LOT of the tears shed throughout this book. Clementine, a large piece of Marsh’s character, is treated so well during this story. The love that comes from Lucy and Marsh during the discussion of this was so special, heartwrenching. A lot of Marsh’s story comes to light throughout the book so I really don’t want to give any spoilers. But be ready for tears!!!

The story of these two was extremely hard to read at times. There are decisions that each character made that made me physically ill. And while this may sound dramatic and seem that these actions shouldn’t have occurred, I think they’re essential to the story. These characters have a lot that they’re processing and going through and they’re trying to cope in anyway they can find. I think Joss wrote these scenes with care, and uses them for the right reasons. They don’t feel out of place or “wrong” but as someone who was so emotionally attached to these characters these scenes put me through the wringer. This book obviously ends with a HEA (THANK GOD), there are points that made me think a lot about myself and the way I see love and relationships from both characters.

I will sing this book and Joss’s praises for the rest of my days, there is something so special about an author who can write two entirely different stories and still have them speak to the reader and carry the same emotional bandwidth.

Thank you to Dell Romance and NetGalley for the arc of this book in exchange for my honest opinion!!!

P.S. Please do not ask me which book I like better, don’t ask me which couple I like better, don’t asked me to compare the two books in Joss’s universe. To ask me that is like (I assume) asking a mom her favorite child. I love the two books for entirely different reasons. These stories are uniquely their own, these characters and couple are uniquely them. I will not take any further questions.
Profile Image for Abigail Davis-Fletcher.
408 reviews4 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
April 18, 2026
Thank you to Headline Eternal and NetGalley for providing me with this ARC in exchange for my honest feedback.

14% into Let’s Kiss and Tell, I described as feeling like a perfect summer’s day. You know the type: it’s not too hot but not too cold, there’s a gentle breeze, you have a crisp drink (or three) to hand, and you’re with your favourite people in the world. There’s probably a beautiful view, or you’re in a pub garden; one or the other. I felt warm. I felt like this book had two arms wrapped tight around me, holding me in front of a beautiful sunset while it told me that everything would be okay. As we progressed through the story, things got fraught. I felt less held, more scared. I bit my cheek. I cried. My heart panged. At all times, I was completely and wholly invested in Lucy and Marsh. I grieved with them and I loved with them. I literally snorted at how funny they are, but I also gasped at jaw-dropping revelations and sobbed as they doubted and hurt themselves. I felt every emotion under the sun reading Let’s Kiss and Tell, and I already can’t wait to read it again.

Lucy is brazen and forward. She portrays a woman who knows what she wants and isn’t afraid to get it. What is hidden is the fact that, although that may be true, that part of herself is rooted in fear. She has seen a lot. She has perceived love as dangerous, life-ruining. She almost sees those who give up everything for love as weak and/or naive. Lucy believes that she is the one who really understands love, and that’s why she would avoid it all costs. She is hyper-independent, an only child with a strained relationship with her parents, who she judges for their past indiscretions. She has learned how to completely self-reliant. She never wants to need anybody else, but especially not romantically, and she knows that she has succeeded in building that life for herself.

At times, I wanted to shake Lucy. I wanted to yell at her to see what was standing right in front of her, how good she had it. But I couldn’t, because she’s fictional, and I wouldn’t if she weren’t because I understand her. I saw parts of myself in Lucy. I’m not afraid of love; I’m afraid of heartbreak. I know how to be alone and I am not jumping at the chance to let somebody into the independent life I’ve made if I know they could hurt me. Bearing witness to Lucy’s story made me rethink a lot, particularly her greatest lesson: just because you can be alone doesn’t mean you have to be.

Marsh is a contradiction. In his career, he is confident and secure, passionate and reliable. He speaks beautifully. From the off, the way he describes Lucy is like a breath of fresh air. It is prose, poetry. It’s birdsong filtering through the trees. He sees her so stunningly and displays her to us in such glorious sunlight that it’s impossible for the reader not to fall in love with Lucy ourselves. In his personal life, he is full of self-doubt. Sometimes, he’s numb but, when he feels, he feels unworthy of goodness, unworthy of love. He doesn’t believe he deserves good things or good people. He is kind and loyal and dedicated, but he cannot see himself as somebody deserving of love. It is so awfully sad. Like I saw myself in Lucy, I see myself in Marsh, perhaps because our stories are so similar. We both lost something and, afterwards, lost ourselves. We both lost our partner, and we both had to watch them have the life we were going to have with somebody else, the person they chose while they were still with us. Marsh is full of regret, but what he isn’t filled with is confusion (that’s where I cannot relate). He truly believes he deserves the way that his relationship ended, and that hurts to see. At a certain point, I worried that he would never learn to accept that he deserves to love himself. He can very clearly love his family, love Lucy, but his biggest flaw is his inability to love Marsh. His journey was cathartic and gutting. He may be one of my favourite characters of all time, maybe because he’s me.

Let’s Kiss and Tell was a warm hug and a shoulder to cry on. In parts, it gave idiots-to-lovers. In parts, it was almost second chance while both Lucy and Marsh had to learn to give themselves a shot, to love themselves. Sometimes, it was hilarious. Sometimes, it was heartbreaking. It was always real.
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