I am such a huge Lia Louis fan. <i>Better Left Unsent</i> is an absolutely gorgeous, laugh-out-loud, heartwarming tale of a life fully lived, with one of the <b>smartest romcom</b> concepts I've ever come across. Such a <b>joyous read</b>
- Beth O'Leary, Sunday Times Bestseller,
Such a brilliant premise and an <b>unrelenting delight</b>! I opened this one to peek and ended up reading it in one, breathless sitting. Voicy, hilarious, vulnerable and triumphant, <i>Better Left Unsent</i> is an absolute blast. <b>Pure romance magic</b>!
- Christina Lauren, New York Times Bestseller,
This novel is <b>perfection</b>. I was stunned by the <b>high-concept hook</b> and blown away by its execution. In a world of romcoms that can blur into one another, Lia Louis is standing head and shoulders above every single one
- Gillian McAllister, Sunday Times and New York Times Bestseller,
Who among us hasn't accidentally sent an email we wished we hadn't to the wrong person? This cringe-worthy setup - the premise of Lia Louis' <i>Better Left Unsent</i> - blossoms into a <b>charming story</b> about living with authenticity, owning our mistakes, and being brave enough to stop chasing love . . . and to let it <i>find</i> us instead
- Jodi Picoult, New York Times Bestseller,
No one writes a romcom like Lia Louis. <i>Better Left Unsent</i> is <b>beyond wonderful</b>; so funny, so sweet, very, <b>very romantic</b>, and somehow managed to make me feel better about every email I've ever sent accidentally. Lia is and always will be my auto-buy author, this is the <b>perfect book</b> to brighten up your day
- Lindsey Kelk, Sunday Times Bestseller,
'Laugh-out-loud, heartwarming tale' BETH O'LEARY
'Pure romance magic' CHRISTINA LAUREN
'Beyond wonderful, so funny, so sweet' LINDSEY KELK
Millie Chandler is known at work as the nice receptionist who got dumped by the company hotshot, and ever since then, she has vowed to keep everything to herself - her feelings, her hopes, and especially her fears.
But Millie does have an outlet: her emails. From sarcastic replies to her rude boss, rants to friends about their terrible taste in men to a five-hundred-word love declaration to her ex, who three years on, is about to marry someone else. Millie's reality lives in her drafts until the morning she discovers that they are somehow in her sent folder. The truth is out.
As every dark secret she's worked so hard to keep password protected is released, Millie must fix the chaos her words have caused.
Will Millie find the strength to open both her heart, and her inbox?