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  Advance Praise for Love by the Book

  “HUGELY enjoyable! Great fun, a gripping read, and very touching.”

  —New York Times bestselling author Marian Keyes

  “Love by the Book feels like a no-holds-barred girls’ night. I found myself laughing out loud at every turn. Melissa Pimentel is a great new voice. She’ll go far!”

  —Cara Lockwood, USA Today bestselling author of I Do (But I Don’t)

  “Melissa Pimentel’s voice is wickedly funny and entirely appealing. Reading Love by the Book is like taking a tour of London on the arm of an audacious and hilarious new friend—in other words, a whole lot of fun!”

  —Meg Donohue, USA Today bestselling author of All the Summer Girls

  “Wincingly honest and hilariously perceptive, Love by the Book is a fresh, funny, clever take on dating, relating, and finding love.”

  —Anna Maxted, bestselling author of Getting Over It and Running in Heels

  “A fun romantic comedy (or tragedy, depending on the day). If you love The Mindy Project, imagine Mindy in London surrounded by British hotties, fabulous friends, and way too much bad dating advice. A wonderful debut by Melissa Pimental. Can’t wait to dive into her next novel.”

  —Kim Gruenenfelder, author of A Total Waste of Makeup

  “I loved this book! So smart and sassy but with a great big heart, too. It sends up the whole game of modern romance by applying Harvard Business School techniques, Victorian dating rules, and Flapper ideology to the Tinder age. You’ll go through this book as quickly as Lauren “swipes left” on her iPhone. Love by the Book will delight anyone who has ever tried looking for love.”

  —Naomi Wood, author of Mrs. Hemingway

  “Who hasn’t wondered whether if they just hit on the precise formula, they’d find the right man? In Love by the Book, Pimentel’s protagonist, Lauren, explores this idea full-tilt by adopting an advice-book-of-the-month approach to the problem. I often found myself laughing out loud and quickly turning the pages to find out what that month’s dictum would have Lauren doing. A fun, fast-paced read.”

  —Catherine McKenzie, bestselling author of Hidden and Arranged

  “Love by the Book hits its humor beats in all the right places, and I love when someone comes up with an idea that prompts me to say ‘I wish I had thought of that.’ Pimentel’s ‘experiment’ proves that the best book on love is the one you write yourself along the way.”

  —Elisa Lorello, bestselling author of Faking It and She Has Your Eyes

  PENGUIN BOOKS

  LOVE BY THE BOOK

  Melissa Pimentel grew up in a small town in Massachusetts in a house without cable, and therefore much of her childhood was spent watching 1970s British comedy on public television. At twenty-two, she made the move to London to do an MA in modern literature at University College London. She has lived there happily for ten years, though she still adamantly refuses to eat a Scotch egg. Before meeting her fiancé, she spent her time trawling the London dating scene for clean, nonsociopathic men and blogging about it, which became the inspiration for her first novel. These days, she spends much of her time reading in the various pubs of Stoke Newington and engaging in a long-standing emotional feud with her disgruntled cat, Welles. She works in publishing.

  PENGUIN BOOKS

  Published by the Penguin Group

  Penguin Group (USA) LLC

  375 Hudson Street

  New York, New York 10014

  USA | Canada | UK | Ireland | Australia | New Zealand | India | South Africa | China

  penguin.com

  A Penguin Random House Company

  Published simultaneously in Great Britain (under the title Age, Sex, Location)

  and the United States of America in Penguin Books 2015

  Copyright © 2015 by Melissa Pimentel

  Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.

  LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA

  Pimentel, Melissa.

  Love by the book / Melissa Pimentel.

  pages cm

  ISBN 978-0-698-18754-2

  I. Title.

  PS3616.148L68 2015

  813'.6—dc23 2014032891

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Cover illustration and design: Malika Favre

  Art direction: Roseanne Serra

  Version_1

  Contents

  Advance Praise for Love by the Book

  About the Author

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  March

  BOOK ONE: THE RULES

  April 1

  April 2

  April 4

  April 5

  April 13

  April 14

  April 19

  April 27

  April 28

  The Rules in Conclusion

  BOOK TWO: THE TECHNIQUE OF THE LOVE AFFAIR

  May 1

  May 8

  May 12

  May 13

  May 15

  May 18

  May 20

  May 24

  May 31

  The Technique of the Love Affair in Conclusion

  BOOK THREE: NOT TONIGHT, MR. RIGHT

  June 2

  June 4

  June 8

  June 9

  June 11

  June 13

  June 14/15

  June 15 Continued

  June 18

  June 26

  June 27

  Not Tonight, Mr. Right in Conclusion

  June 29

  BOOK FOUR: THE RULES OF THE GAME

  July 1

  July 2

  July 7

  July 9

  July 11

  July 17

  July 19

  July 23

  July 27/28

  The Rules of the Game in Conclusion

  BOOK FIVE: THE ART OF DATING

  July 28 Continued

  August 1

  August 3

  August 5

  August 7

  August 9

  August 10

  August 11

  August 16

  August 17

  August 24

  August 31

  The Art of Dating in Conclusion

  BOOK SIX: BELLE DE JOUR’S GUIDE TO MEN

  September 1

  September 6

  September 7

  September 8

  September 11

  September 14

  September 18

  September 24

  September 28

  September 29

  September 30

  Belle de Jour’s Guide to Men in Conclusion

  BOOK SEVEN: MANNERS FOR WOMEN

  October 1

  October 3

  October 5

  October 6

 
October 8

  October 10

  October 12

  October 13

  October 25

  October 26

  October 29

  October 31

  Manners for Women in Conclusion

  BOOK EIGHT: FIND A HUSBAND AFTER 35

  November 1

  November 2

  November 3

  November 5

  November 6

  November 8

  November 9

  November 11

  November 15

  November 17

  November 19

  November 20

  November 21

  November 22

  November 28

  November 30

  December 1

  Find a Husband After 35 in Conclusion

  December 2

  December 7

  Three Months Later

  AUTHOR’S NOTE

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  BIBLIOGRAPHY

  To Katie and Simon, my two better halves

  March

  This project was born, like so many things, from an egg. Two, to be exact.

  Adrian walked in just in time to see me crack two eggs on the side of the pan and pour them into the sizzling butter. I leaned into him when he wrapped his arms around me and peered over my shoulder at the stove.

  “You making eggs?” he said, voice still gravelly with sleep.

  “How did you guess?” I said, turning to give him a quick kiss. “I remembered you saying you liked them, so I thought I’d make them for you.” I gave the eggs a quick flip and slid them out of the pan onto the waiting buttered toast.

  “You made these for me?” Adrian said, eyes widening.

  “Yep,” I said, placing the plate on the table before grabbing my bowl of granola and yogurt off the counter. I pulled the yellow terrycloth robe around me and looked at him.

  “You’re not having any?” he said, looking at his own plate with even more suspicion.

  “Nope. I’m not a big egg fan.”

  “I see. You made these eggs just for me.” I watched his pupils dilate out of fear. “Right.”

  “Christ, they’re only eggs. Calm down. Do you want some pepper?”

  I could see the wheels turning in his head. Eggs led to Sunday afternoons in antique shops, dinner parties with other couples, meetings with the parents, a marriage proposal, an elaborate wedding, three screaming children, a wife with fat ankles and, eventually, the sweet release of death. In his mind, eggs led to stuff. Scary stuff.

  Within minutes of polishing off the plate, the man was up and out like a shot, pulling his shoes on and mumbling something about getting back in time to watch Football Focus with his roommate.

  I had scared a man with eggs. I’d scared him so badly that he had chosen Football Focus over having sex with me. It wasn’t looking good for me or for my vagina.

  It had all started so promisingly. Last summer, I had moved into my room in Old Street with a heart filled with hope: that this move from Portland to London would be a fresh start for me, that I would wipe clean the traces of a relationship with the strong-jawed, kind-eyed man I’d left behind, that the job I had nabbed as the events coordinator at the Science Museum would lead to even bigger and better things and, possibly most pressingly, that I would have lots of great sex with attractive Englishmen who were as uninterested in commitment as I was.

  I’d seen the apartment advertised on Gumtree just before I’d left Maine and had immediately sent through a request. It looked amazing in the pictures—the bedroom was painted a pale yellow and the furniture was all weathered white wood—and according to Google maps, the location was perfect. The woman renting out the room, Lucy, agreed to reserve it for me until I arrived in London the following week after I sent several pleading emails and the promise of a jar of Marshmallow Fluff.

  When I arrived at the address, I was a little surprised to find a towering council estate rather than the little Victorian conversion I’d expected, but I took a deep breath and pressed the buzzer, images of the bedroom still dancing in my head. I was furry-mouthed with jet lag and essentially homeless; I couldn’t afford to write the apartment off before seeing it.

  Lucy met me at the door. “Hello! You must be Lauren. Come on in, babe.” I took in her wide smile, bright blue eyes and head of insane blond curls and felt immediately better about the situation. She led me into the cramped kitchen and put the kettle on.

  The kitchen didn’t quite match the design standards I’d seen in the photographs. Lucy had obviously made the best of things, filling the countertop with pots of fresh herbs and a bright pink set of scales, but the oven door was hanging at a precarious angle and there was a large hole gouged into the MDF floor. It wasn’t exactly Martha Stewart Living.

  Lucy flicked on the kettle. “Coffee?”

  I nodded.

  “How do you take yours?”

  “Just black would be great, thanks.”

  “I don’t know how you can drink it like that. I need about eight sugars and three pints of milk in mine. Especially today: I have such a hangover. Anyway, I’m glad you’re here and seem normal—the last girl who lived here was a born-again Christian and didn’t drink. Can you imagine? After the third time she tipped my bottle of rum down the sink, I said, good luck to you, love, but you’re not staying here.”

  She handed me a mug and I took a sip.

  “Let me show you the rest of the place.” Lucy led me on a short but thorough tour of the apartment. “This is the lounge”—an enormous brown faux-leather couch marooned in the middle of four blood-red walls—“and there’s a balcony, too”—a concrete slab slapped onto the side of the tower block with a strip of barbed wire running along the top—“here’s the bathroom”—a microbe’s paradise with one of those electric showers we Americans have nightmares about—“and this would be your room”—a bare mattress balanced atop a metal frame and a dilapidated IKEA wardrobe, the saving grace being a tiny window displaying an amazing view over London.

  “Would you mind if I took a look at your room?” I asked. “Just to get an idea of the difference in size.”

  “Of course! Sorry, it’s a bit of a mess at the moment.” Lucy opened the door to her bedroom and—lo and behold—the fabled yellow room was revealed. It looked like Laura Ashley had spontaneously combusted in there—everything was pastel and floral and very, very neat.

  “It’s beautiful,” I said. “It gives me hope that I might be able to do something decent with my room.” I had a sudden vision of shabby-chic industrial interiors and reclaimed bookshelves made from old French wine crates, and made a mental note to sign up to Pinterest.

  Lucy smoothed an imaginary crease on the pale pink duvet. “Thanks, love. Just takes a lick of paint and some elbow grease,” she said. “Come on, let’s sit in the lounge and have a chat.”

  I perched on the enormous couch and Lucy drew up a chair opposite.

  “So, Lo,” she said, taking a sip from her mug, “tell me how you ended up in London.”

  “I’ve always wanted to live here,” I said with a shrug. That was an understatement: I’d dreamed of living in London ever since I was little. The childhood bedroom I’d shared with my sister had been covered with pictures of the London skyline, and I’d gorged myself on the Beatles and Carry On films from a young age. London was my fabled land and I’d managed to pull myself onto its shores like a shipwreck survivor.

  Of course, I knew I had been at the helm of that ill-fated ship and had spent the past few months driving it straight into the rocks. I thought of the look on Dylan’s face when I packed my bags, and the look on my father’s face when he dropped me off at the airport, and pushed them both deep down to the dark recesses of my brain where I couldn’t see them. I wasn’t ready to admit to myself w
hat I’d done, never mind a relative stranger.

  I turned to Lucy with a bright smile. “Have you ever been to the States?”

  Her eyes took on a misty quality. “No, never, but I’ve always wanted to go. One day!”

  “Well, I’d be happy to give you some tips when the time comes.”

  “Thanks, babe. Now, what’s happening on the man front? Have you got a boyfriend and, if you do, will he be staying often? Is he very loud and messy?”

  I laughed. “Nope, no boyfriend and no plans to have one anytime soon. I just want to enjoy being single for a while.”

  “Thank God. I’ve just broken up with someone so I’m desperate to go out and let my hair down.”

  I grinned at her. “I’m completely on board with that. How’s it going so far?” I asked. “Any exciting prospects?”

  Lucy shook her head sadly. “Babe, it’s been grim. I’ve started looking on Facebook to see if any of my old schoolmates are now attractive single men that I could get off with.”

  “That’s not a good sign.”

  Lucy shook her head gravely. “It’s not. What’s it like in America? I just imagine lots of fit men called Brad or Tyson or whatever, wandering around being muscly and lovely. I bet you’ve had loads of gorgeous, hunky boyfriends.”

  The last thing I wanted to do was delve into my American dating history. “Not really,” I said with a shrug. “The whole dating thing is super structured over there; it’s all ‘playing the field’ and ‘three-date rule’ and relentless life scheduling. If you don’t have a diamond the size of a grapefruit on your finger by the time you’re twenty-nine, you’re seen as some sort of leper.”

  “Grim.”

  I nodded. “It’s pretty exhausting.”

  “Well, you’re here now. I’m sure we can get up to some mischief together. Two single girls in the big smoke.” She scanned over my bedraggled reddish hair, oversized army jacket, ripped skinny jeans and trashed Converses. “First, we might need to take you to Westfield shopping center . . .”

  And that was that. A couple of cigarettes on the balcony solidified us as partners in crime, and I moved in the following day. From there followed countless nights of shoe-borrowing, Jack Daniel’s and Cokes (me), Bacardi and Diet Cokes (her), dancing in clubs reeking of sweat and stale cigarette smoke, 3 a.m. rants and morning-after catch-ups. It was unbelievably fun, and just what I’d hoped to get out of London.