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How to Fall in Love with a Man Who Lives in a Bush

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How to Fall in Love with a Man Who Lives in a Bush

By: Emmy Abrahamson, Nichola Smalley - translator
Narrated by: Nicky Diss
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About this listen

A fresh, hilarious and compulsively readable love story with the most wonderful kernel of truth to it. An uplifting and clever read for fans of Graeme Simsion and Marian Keyes.

Julia is looking for Mr Right, but Ben is more Mr Right-Now-He-Could-Do-With-a-Bath..

You may think you know what kind of novel this is, but you’d be wrong.

Yes, Julia is a single-girl cliché, living alone with her cat in Vienna and working in a language school. And yes, a series of disastrous dates has left her despairing of ever finding The One – until Ben sits next to her on a bench. He’s tall, dark, handsome…

…and also incredibly hairy, barefoot, a bit ripe-smelling and of no fixed abode.

You guessed it – they fall in love, as couples in novels do. But can Julia overlook the differences between them, abandon logic and choose with her heart?

Funny, filthy (literally) and fizzing with life – and based on a true story! – this is the perfect antidote to all those books promising you that Prince Charming lives in a castle.

©2018 Emmy Abrahamson, 2018 Translation - Nichola Smalley (P)2017 HarperCollins Publishers
Contemporary Contemporary Romance Fiction Literary Fiction Literature & Fiction Romance Romantic Comedy Women's Fiction Comedy Feel-Good Heartfelt Witty Funny
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Critic reviews

‘… a shockingly funny romantic comedy’ The Times

‘Utterly charming and laugh out loud funny. This is a total pick-me-up of a novel. Adored it’ Susie Steiner

‘Beautiful, sad and funny’ Skanska Dagbladet

‘Simply very funny’ Gothenburg Post

What listeners say about How to Fall in Love with a Man Who Lives in a Bush

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Enjoyed, listened through in one day

Heard about this elsewhere and glad to find it here. Felt real and unpredictable.

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How to think outside the box

Some rather brilliant passages about the dreariness of conforming to middle class expectations. I think hippies are given rather a bad press in this book but I haven't been to Vancouver.

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