Feel-good British romantic comedy, for enemies-to-lovers fans.❤️
The Attraction Abacus, by Evelyn G. Foster.
Why waste time chasing love when you can be matched by a number?
Age, looks, intelligence, wealth — the Attraction Abacus counts it all and gives you your entire romantic worth as a single, eye-opening score. Or does it?
When doom-dreaming author, Evelyn Foster, takes an Attraction Abacus flyer from the infuriatingly charming Luke, her carefully unplanned life changes in ways she never expected. Evelyn is soon caught up in fake-dating chaos, questionable matchmaking, and finds herself falling for a man she knows she shouldn’t.
Is Luke really the one? Can Evelyn help make the Abacus a global dating hit? And what happens when the owner’s secret threatens to throw love completely off balance?
Packed with enemies-to-lovers banter, big feelings, and gloriously bad decisions, The Attraction Abacus is a laugh-out-loud romantic comedy where love must triumph over adversity and total incompetence.
So… what’s your number?
For readers who adore the wit and warmth of Emily Henry, the charming chaos of Beth O’Leary, and the clever sparkle of Ali Hazelwood.
A feel-good, enemies-to-lovers rom-com where love faces bad timing, hurt feelings, and a very questionable dating algorithm.
Evelyn Foster, a philosophy graduate, feels stuck in a draining hotel job and wonders how her life took this turn. Then she meets Luke, a street canvasser who acts like he knows everything and seems like trouble, and somehow she lands a new job at the Attraction Abacus.
The Attraction Abacus isn’t your typical dating agency. Instead of focusing on just personality, chemistry, or vibes, it boils everyone down to one important number. What could go wrong?
Evelyn doesn’t like Luke from the start. He’s arrogant, opinionated, and dating Alice, who is pushy, polished, and even harder to get along with. Meanwhile, Brian, the well-meaning but clueless owner of the Attraction Abacus, tries his best to run a business he doesn’t really understand.
To help keep the company going, Evelyn agrees to go on fake dates to boost the number of female clients. Luke collects feedback from the unlucky men, and during these talks, sparks fly. Mostly because they argue. Their opinions clash all the time, until it becomes clear they might not be so different after all.
Everything reaches a turning point at the company’s big costume party, where too much alcohol and an almost-kiss change everything.
Now Evelyn must face her own insecurities, deal with Luke’s very real and intimidating girlfriend, and make a tough choice: follow her dream of writing a novel in India or stay to help the Attraction Abacus survive. Maybe find love, too.
What’s your number?
Bookstagram reviews for The Attraction Abacus