Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.
What's Hot
Author: christinalauren
An instant New York Times bestseller and “perfect Christmas treat” (Publishers Weekly): Maelyn always spends the holidays at a wintry cabin with family and friends — and this year, a simple wish means she’ll relive the week over and over again! “Wraps its reader in its cozy, jolly embrace like a beloved holiday sweater” (Entertainment Weekly).
From the New York Times bestselling author of The Unhoneymooners: Working for a couple of design gurus on the brink of stardom seems like a dream come true — but for Carey, it’s been a total disaster. When geeky engineer James joins the team, can Carey create something beautiful with him? “Charming” (Library Journal).
An “entertaining and moving romance” (Booklist) from the New York Times bestselling author of The Unhoneymooners: More than a decade after their whirlwind relationship ended in heartbreak, Sam and Tate unexpectedly reunite — and find themselves asking whether true love can ever come twice in a lifetime.
A “witty and downright hilarious” read (Helen Hoang) from a New York Times bestselling author! When her sister gets food poisoning after her wedding, Olive is gifted with the honeymoon trip to Maui. But she’ll have to go with Ethan, the best man — and her sworn enemy… “Will have readers hanging on every word” (Publishers Weekly).
With over 6,800 five-star Goodreads ratings: Josh has known zany Hazel since college — but always kept his distance. As he rebounds from a cheating girlfriend, a friendship with Hazel is just what Josh needs… If only they’d stop setting each other up on terrible blind dates!
By the New York Times bestselling author who “hilariously depicts modern dating” (Us Weekly), My Favorite Half-Night Stand is a laugh-out-loud romp through online dating and its many, many fails. Millie Morris has always been one of the guys. A UC Santa Barbara professor, she’s a female-serial-killer expert who’s quick with a deflection joke and terrible at getting personal. And she, just like … terrible at getting personal. And she, just like her four best guy friends and fellow professors, is perma-single. So when a routine university function turns into a black tie gala, Mille and her circle make a…
From a New York Times bestselling author: Macy leads a safe and predictable life, not bothering to get emotionally invested. But when she runs into her childhood best friend, Elliot — who was once her whole world — he reawakens feelings she’d thought long forgotten…
From subway to Broadway to happily ever after. Modern love in all its thrill, hilarity, and uncertainty has never been so compulsively readable as in New York Times and #1 international bestselling author Christina Lauren’s (Beautiful Bastard, Dating You / Hating You) new romance. Marriages of convenience are so…inconvenient. For months Holland Bakker has invented excuses to descend into the … has invented excuses to descend into the subway station near her apartment, drawn to the captivating music performed by her street musician crush. Lacking the nerve to actually talk to the gorgeous stranger, fate steps in one night in…
“A hopeful and moving love story” (Publishers Weekly): When high schooler Tanner moves to a conservative town, he plans on keeping his bisexuality a secret. But as he gets to know classmate Sebastian, he can’t help falling for him… “This book is epic” (Cosmopolitan).
Everyone knows that all’s fair in love and war. But these two will learn that sabotage is a dish best served naked. The first standalone romance by New York Times and #1 international bestselling author Christina Lauren (Beautiful Bastard) is a sexy, compulsively readable romantic comedy that dives headlong into the thrill and doubt of modern love. Despite the odds against them from an … odds against them from an embarrassing meet-awkward at a mutual friend’s Halloween party, Carter and Evie immediately hit it off. Even the realization that they’re both high-powered agents at competing firms in Hollywood isn’t enough…