Chef's Choice: A Novel

Chef's Choice: A Novel

by TJ Alexander
Chef's Choice: A Novel

Chef's Choice: A Novel

by TJ Alexander

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Overview

A 2024 Lambda Literary Award Finalist

“Urgent and intimate.” —The New York Times Book Review

A fake dating arrangement turns to real love in this deliciously delightful queer rom-com from the author of the sweetly satisfying Chef’s Kiss.

When Luna O’Shea is unceremoniously fired from her frustrating office job, she tries to count her blessings: she’s a proud trans woman who has plenty of friends, a wonderful roommate, and a good life in New York City. But blessings don’t pay the bills.

Enter Jean-Pierre, a laissez-faire trans man and the heir to a huge culinary empire—which he’ll only inherit if he can jump through all the hoops his celebrity chef grandfather has placed in his path. First hoop: he needs a girlfriend, a role that Luna is happy to play...for the right price. She’s got rent to pay, after all! Second hoop: they both need to learn how to cook a series of elaborate, world-renowned family recipes to prove that Jean-Pierre is a worthy heir. Admittedly, Luna doesn’t even know how to crack an egg, but she’s not going to let that—or any pesky feelings for Jean-Pierre—stop her.

Another swoon-worthy and heartwarming queer love story from a charming new voice in romance.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781982189105
Publisher: Atria/Emily Bestler Books
Publication date: 05/30/2023
Series: Chef's Kiss , #2
Pages: 336
Sales rank: 432,197
Product dimensions: 5.30(w) x 8.20(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

TJ Alexander, the critically acclaimed author of Second Chances in New Port Stephen, Chef’s Kiss, and Chef’s Choice, writes about queer love. Originally from Florida, they received their MA in writing and publishing from Emerson College in Boston. They live in New York City with their wife and various houseplants.

Read an Excerpt

Chapter 1 Chapter 1
Luna O’Shea cracked her neck in four places before pulling off her headset and tossing it onto her desk. Working from home was usually a godsend, but today Luna felt exhausted, and that last call with Tim had not done her any favors.

Her wildly disorganized boss was the CEO of Papr Tigr, the digital-marketing-slash-advertising firm (or was it advertising-slash-marketing? Luna could never remember) where she had worked remotely for almost five years. Tim was normally a scatterbrained weirdo, but today he’d been in rare form. Luna had spent the last three and a quarter hours walking him through yet another Word document with his very personal, very important log-ins listed in Arial font, despite Luna’s protests that writing all that down in a hackable file and then emailing it back and forth was a bad idea.

Kind of funny how the head of a company that touted itself as being on the cutting edge was so bad with anything digital. Tim pulled a $600,000 yearly salary, and Luna really couldn’t understand why anyone would think he was worth a fraction of that. Lose a zero, maybe, but what did she know? She was just a personal assistant. And today, her job had consisted of babysitting Tim while he anxiously learned how to update and save the doc himself. Her talents had just been wasted on nearly four hours of sixth-grade-level Microsoft Office instruction.

At least she was almost done for the day. She unhooked her phone from its charger and checked her notifications. Simone still hadn’t responded to Luna’s question about dinner plans; she probably already had a dinner date set with her themfriend, Ray. As usual. Luna silently resigned herself to another night of microwaved taquitos and a Kraft single eaten straight out of the wrapper. You know, for calcium.

At first it had been kind of fun for Luna, having the whole apartment to herself when Simone stayed over at Ray’s. But after a few weeks of seeing Simone only when she swung home to grab some clean clothes, all the alone time had lost its appeal. You could have only so many one-person dance parties before it got old. Between that and working from home, Luna could go from one end of the week to the next without speaking to another person in the flesh.

She wondered if Simone would eventually move in with Ray, since they spent so much time together anyway. That would be awesome for them—but a disaster for Luna, who couldn’t possibly cover the entire rent on her salary, and who wasn’t thrilled with the idea of finding a new roomie. She’d gotten comfortable over the years, living with Simone. Sure, Simone was neurotic about keeping the bathroom clean, and she did take up way more than half of the fridge space, but she was a loyal friend and always made sure Luna was eating well. The perks of having a professional chef as a roommate.

If Simone decided to move out of the apartment, Luna would be holding the short end of the stick in more ways than one.

She checked her group chat for some much-needed human interaction, but quickly deflated. Aisha was telling everyone about the house she and Ruth were buying in New Jersey, and the other girls were asking about how many guest rooms the place had and what they planned on doing with the backyard.

Willow: can u fit a pool? i want a pool

Lily: It’s not your house! It’s Aisha’s. Although, Aisha, if you want to put in an herb garden...

Luna tried to compose a suitably cheery message of her own, but the other responses and counterpoints were coming so fast and furious that she couldn’t get a word in edgewise. She was happy for Aisha, truly, but the thought of losing friends to the far-off suburbs was a bummer. Soon Aisha and her wife would be wrapped up in their responsibilities and have no time to hang out. Just like Simone.

Luna slapped her phone screen-down on her desk and said aloud, “That is black-and-white thinking, and I live in a world full of color.” It was one of her many mantras designed to disrupt negative thoughts. Yes, her friends were growing up and going in different directions, but that didn’t mean Luna was being left behind. She was doing fine! Her blood pressure was great. Her pedicure was unchipped. She was a happy, fulfilled person.

She checked the group chat again.

Willow and Sara had moved on to gushing about their new love interests. Apparently, one was a competitive deadlifter and the other had a world record in rock climbing. Abs that you could serve a mezze platter on, Sara declared.

Luna could feel her teeth grinding. She tossed her phone onto her bed, where it bounced once before coming to a stop far out of her reach. “Comparing myself to others does everyone a disservice,” she recited to the ceiling, though she had a hard time believing a word of it.

How could she not compare? Everyone else had relationships and houses and mezze-worthy abs, and what did Luna have? Her last hookup, a well-read barista with good cheekbones and a bad attitude, had fizzled out weeks ago. Luna disliked ghosting on principle, but in Rick’s case, she’d figured leaving his texts on read was the better part of valor.

Luna took a deep, cleansing lion’s breath. It would be more productive to focus on gratitude, she decided. She plucked a sparkly purple journal from one of the shelves above her desk and, uncapping a pen with her teeth, began to jot things down in her stubby script: She had a mother who loved and supported her. She was living her truth as a proud trans woman. She had an amazing group of friends. She lived in New York, like she’d always dreamed of doing. And she had a good, steady job. Even if it is a little frustrating at times, she scrawled.

As if in response, her work laptop pinged.

Luna frowned at the video chat icon bouncing on the screen. Why would Jennifer from HR be calling, and at the end of the day? They didn’t have anything on the calendar.

Maybe it was another Tim-related fire drill. Sometimes he’d close out of a window, think his file was deleted forever, and randomly call whoever he thought might be responsible for a good yell. HR got involved more often than IT.

Luna jammed her headset back over her ears and answered with audio only on her end. Jennifer’s glossy, stick-straight brown hair and wide, pearly smile filled her screen.

“Hi, Jen, I was actually about to log off for the day,” Luna said in her corporate voice, full of false cheer. She doodled a small sun in the margins of her journal. “Is this urgent, or can we circle back first thing tomorrow?” Tomorrow was a Friday, and Luna knew no one really got anything done on Fridays. Whatever the problem was, she could tackle it the following Monday.

“It is quite urgent, actually.” Jennifer mirrored Luna’s tone to perfection. “Oh, would you mind turning on your camera? I can’t see your video.”

Luna grimaced. This fucking company, always asking her to turn on her camera. Like there couldn’t possibly be a good reason as to why she wouldn’t want to stare at her own face for hours on end—and know other people were staring, too. The dysphoria was real sometimes. Part of the joy of working from home was not being perceived in a corporeal way, but video-chatting with actual video was being pushed as part of the whole “corporate culture of Papr Tigr” or whatever. She put her journal back on its shelf with a stifled sigh.

“Sure thing.” She switched her camera on. For fun, she had a cute Zoom background of cartoon bunnies romping through a field of flowers. And there she was, smack-dab in the middle of it, minimal makeup on her pale face—just her usual foundation and a touch of eyeliner—and her blonde hair pulled into a low ponytail so the purple dye that still clung to the last three inches wouldn’t be visible on camera. Lately she’d gotten some comments about how unprofessional her hair looked, even though Quin in finance had a blue streak in hers and she never got shit for it. But Luna was a team player; she could rock a ponytail until the last of the dye job got trimmed. “What’s up?”

Jennifer smiled back from her standard Zoom square, her office wall in the background. “Well, first of all, it’s nice to see your face for once!”

“Haha, yeah.” Luna kept smiling, glancing at the clock in the lower corner of the screen. It was ten minutes past quitting time.

“I wanted to catch you before the end of the day.” Jennifer’s smile did not abate, but it did take on a pitying edge. “These things are never easy for me. I want you to understand this is not personal. It’s just business.”

Luna’s brain shorted out for a second. She could see Jennifer’s mouth moving on the screen, but only a low buzz of static filtered through. She caught a few words, however.

Termination. Effective immediately.

“Wait. What? I’m being fired?” Her face was hot, the rest of her body cold. This could not be happening. “Why?”

“As I was explaining,” Jennifer said, still with that manic, saccharine smile plastered across her face, “the company is going through a lot of changes, and we had to make some tough decisions, one of which was to terminate low-performing positions.”

“But—but my performance has always been good. I just had that review last month—I had great feedback!” Luna tried not to look at her own blotchy face on the screen. It was the last thing she wanted to see.

“I can’t comment on internal documents,” Jennifer said crisply. “I can only tell you this decision is final.”

Luna blinked. On her Zoom square, she blinked right back, surrounded by fluffy bunnies. Oh, this was humiliating. “You made me train those two new assistants that were hired last month. Are you firing them, too? Or is it just me?”

Jennifer’s smile finally dropped. “I also can’t comment on the status of other employees, Luna. You know that.”

The answer was crystal clear, then. Of course they were keeping the younger, inexperienced, cheaper assistants and tossing Luna to the curb. That had probably been the plan all along.

Though—if they needed two of them to cover Luna’s workload, it wasn’t about the money. It was about other stuff. Like who looked more “approachable” on Zoom calls. Who was a better “fit” for the “culture.” All the standard code words for cis.

Her face felt like it was on fire. I will not cry, she told herself. I just won’t.

“Please, I know this must be difficult. It’s hard for me, too. But I am asking you to remain professional,” Jennifer said. She squinted at the screen. “I’m sending all the documentation regarding your severance package to your personal email now. It’s extremely generous, as you’ll see: two extra weeks on top of your final paycheck.”

Generous? That won’t even cover a month’s rent, Luna thought wildly.

Jennifer bulldozed ahead. “I’ve asked IT to lock your work laptop, so in about three minutes it will shut down and you won’t have any more access to company files.”

“You mean Tim’s log-in doc? The one that includes all his personal information, including his Social Security number?” Luna bit out. “By the way, you shouldn’t let him do stuff like that. You’re asking to get hacked. I’ve tried telling him a thousand times.”

Jennifer sniffed. “I shouldn’t have to remind you that if you retain those files, you will be subject to swift legal action.”

“I don’t plan on retaining anything. I’m just letting you know.”

“Well, you make it sound very threatening, Luna,” Jennifer said. “If I’m being honest, this is a big part of the reason why we have to let you go.”

“What, the fact that I’m pointing out very real dangers to the company?”

“No, your whole tone.” Jennifer’s face twisted into a sneer. “It’s a very off-putting tone.”

Luna’s mouth hung open, speechless. She fought the urge to bring up her performance reviews again; she’d always gotten high marks for her cheerful and professional demeanor. But obviously that didn’t matter right now.

“I don’t think I need another three minutes of this,” Luna managed to say once her mouth was back in working order. “Just send me a UPS label and I’ll ship the laptop back to you.”

“Ah.” Jennifer nodded jerkily and pretended to rearrange some papers on her desk. “Right. Do you happen to have the log-in for the UPS account or...?”

“Are you kidding me?” She was actually going to explode. Her blood was boiling. No one else at this terrible company knew what they were doing, and they expected her to help them out while she was booted out the door? “Bye, Jen. Thanks for the opportunity,” she said, sarcasm rolling off every syllable. She slammed her laptop shut. Hot tears welled in her eyes.

Okay. So that was one less thing for the gratitude journal.

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