Format: E-Book
Read with: Kindle Oasis
Length: Novel
Genre: Contemporary Romance
POV: Third Person, FMC
Series: Standalone
Publisher: St. Martin’s Griffin
Hero: Henry Samuel Beckett
Heroine: Hazel Evans
Sensuality: 🔥🔥🔥
Published On: March 11, 2025
Started On: October 06, 2025
Finished On: October 10, 2025

Charlotte Stein’s My Big Fat Fake Marriage is a slow-burn masterpiece, equal parts tender, hilarious, and scorchingly erotic. It is one of those rare romances that makes you laugh out loud even as your heart clenches in your chest. Set against the backdrop of a writing retreat, Stein crafts a story about two people who, in pretending to be married, stumble into a love so genuine it feels like revelation.
Hazel Evans has spent years distrusting “nice guys,” convinced that anyone too kind must be hiding something dark underneath. Her walls are tall and her humor sharp, the armor she wears against disappointment and rejection. Then there is Henry Samuel Beckett, an American editor living in Britain, thirty-seven, huge, awkward, and unbearably sweet. A man whose kindness is disarming, whose honesty borders on painful, and who hides one startling fact: he is a lifelong virgin who accidentally told his coworkers he was married. When Hazel steps in to help him save face, one fake marriage and a two-week writing retreat later, she finds herself neck-deep in the most confusing, heart-melting relationship of her life.
What begins as pure farce evolves into something quietly profound. Beck and Hazel are opposites in every sense; she is jaded, messy, and self-deprecating; he is gentle, organized, and impossibly sincere. Yet their connection builds with every shared look, every late-night conversation, every teasing exchange about fictional lovers and real longing. The slow progression from discomfort to intimacy is written with such aching precision that by the time their first kiss lands, it feels monumental. Stein’s prose turns sensuality & dirty erotica into poetry, every touch deliberate, every breath electric, something I am always in awe of whenever I read her books.
Beck is, without question, one of the most remarkable heroes to grace contemporary romance. A beta hero in the truest, most beautiful sense of the word; soft but strong, unguarded yet self-aware. He is the antithesis of toxic masculinity, a man who asks before touching, who listens, who delights in giving pleasure simply because it delights her. And Hazel’s journey, learning to trust that kind of goodness, to unlearn the cynicism that’s kept her safe but lonely, is as moving as it is arousing. They are both broken in quiet ways, carrying old wounds from cruelty, neglect, and shame, and the way they heal through each other is nothing short of gorgeous.
As I turned the last page, my thoughts were, “what a fantastic book!”. Every beta hero I come across (not that I read or like reading beta heroes for that matter) will forever have to live up to Henry. He is sweet, simple, a virgin, straightforward, polite, a gentleman, and brilliant even though he hides it. Hazel is the one who judges all nice guys by the same yardstick, that they are untrustworthy and up to no good until she ends up volunteering to be his fake wife.
Charlotte Stein writes remarkable sex scenes as if they are poetry and you cannot help but be moved by it, in all the ways that matter (if you know what I mean). I loved that everything was mutual, they both needed to be seen, heard, felt, and validated, and that perhaps was the highest form of aphrodisiac in this story.
If there is any critique to be made, it is that the book takes its time and painfully so, at times; but that is also its greatest strength. The pacing mirrors the tenderness of their emotional unraveling. Stein does not rush them into love or sex; she lets the intimacy bloom naturally until it becomes inevitable. And when it finally happens, the result is equal parts heat and heart, a celebration of connection, consent, and mutual desire that feels almost sacred.
Recommended for: readers who crave slow-burn romance, beta heroes with hearts of gold, and love stories that celebrate vulnerability as the ultimate form of strength.
Final Verdict: A tender, filthy, and deeply human love story; Stein’s My Big Fat Fake Marriage is slow-burn perfection wrapped in warmth, wit, and the hottest virgin hero you will ever meet.
Favorite Quotes
Because he has that big face, and his emotions are equally enormous, and so it’s just easy with him. He’s like a complicated adult story, told via the medium of a beautiful pop-up book. And for some reason, I think I like reading it.
‘You really want to know? Well, all right, I’ll tell you,’ he says, all beaming grin and obliviousness. In fact, he almost seems casual about the speech he then launches into. ‘One of the main things I used to dream about a lot was reading the papers in bed with someone in the mornings. The lifestyle section, the sports pages, the important news of the day. Me and whoever it was chattering about what we read. Drinking a warm drink that I somehow like, probably because they found it for me. Going for a walk in the park after that, or maybe something more. I’ve never really liked antiquing, but I would antique just for the pleasure of being with another person who does. Walking by their side, with their hand in mine. Listening to them say all the little things that make them glad to be alive.’
I feel the brush of his cheek against mine, the heat of his breath as he slowly eases words into my already addled mind. Better ones than he claimed, too, hotter ones than he claimed. ‘I don’t think I’ve ever seen a lovelier woman than you,’ he says. And yes, I know he’s only doing what he would want to, with somebody he was really trying to seduce.
But even so, it turns me inside out.
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