Miriam Perlman's new neighbor is an absolute nightmare.
Sexually insatiable and devastatingly handsome, the guy seems to be on a mission to seduce half of New York City. Every night, Miriam is forced to endure the sounds of the most casual of sex through the thinnest of walls that separate their apartments. The nightly decathlons are ruining her sleep, impacting her social life (well, whatever is left of it, anyway), and making life completely impossible.
As if that weren't bad enough, he alternates between playfully flirting with her—even going so far as to bring her daily homemade baked goods—and acting like she's invisible. Half the time he pursues her; the other half of the time he finds her about as compelling as a crack in the sidewalk. She has no idea what to make of him, or of the fact that whenever he smiles at her, she wants to be the one he takes home. It's a confusing game, and it's pushing her to the brink.
If there's one thing Miriam Perlman knows, it's that her womanizing next-door neighbor is definitely not the guy for her.
...Right?
Pippa Glencoe's contemporary romance, Against the Wall, explores the hilariously disastrous effects of assuming you know everything about your neighbors—no matter how thin the walls between you might be.
Against the Wall is the first book in The Subway Series, a collection of standalones about a group of friends searching (or not) for their HEA in New York City.
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