
The Love Hypothesis
by Ali Hazelwood (2021)
Like 'The Hating Game', this features a fake dating trope with witty banter and academic setting.

by Sally Thorne (2016)
Nemesis (n.) 1) An opponent or rival whom a person cannot best or overcome; 2) A person’s undoing; 3) Joshua Templeman. For Lucy Hutton and Joshua Templeman, executive assistants to the CEOs of newly merged Bexley-Gamin Publishing, it's hate-at-first-sight. So begins a series of daily passive-aggressive maneuvers, including the staring game, the mirror game, and the HR game, each played with the intensity of the Hunger Games. Their mutual antipathy grows when a new executive position opens at Bexley-Gamin, and both their bosses put their names up for the promotion. Then, the high-stakes games begin! After another 60-hour work week, Lucy logs off her computer and hops on the elevator to head home, as does Joshua. When Joshua hits the emergency button and stops the ride, Lucy is certain her nemesis is going to kill her. Instead, he plants a kiss on her, and Lucy begins to wonder if she really does hate Joshua after all, or if this is yet another game. --
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by Ali Hazelwood (2021)
Like 'The Hating Game', this features a fake dating trope with witty banter and academic setting.

by Christina Lauren (2019)
Similar to 'The Hating Game', this offers a fun enemies-to-lovers dynamic in a tropical setting.

by Emily Henry (2022)
Like 'The Hating Game', this features sharp banter and an enemies-to-lovers arc in a charming setting.

by Elena Armas (2021)
Echoing 'The Hating Game', this book delivers intense tension and a fake dating trope with office rivals.

by Sally Thorne (2019)
From the author of 'The Hating Game', this features Thorne's signature banter and a slow-burn romance.
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