Boss in the Bedsheets cover

Boss in the Bedsheets

The Santillian Triplets • Book 2

by Kate Canterbary

3.96 Goodreads
(7.7K ratings)

Why You'll Love This

A resignation letter written from the guest room of the man she's already sleeping with — the situation was always going to combust.

  • Great if you want: sharp banter, cohabitation chaos, and a genuinely difficult hero
  • The experience: fast-moving and witty with real tension underneath the comedy
  • The writing: Canterbary uses epistolary interludes and crisp dialogue to reveal character fast
  • Skip if: a controlling, slow-to-soften hero tests your patience

About This Book

When your assistant is also your houseguest, your wedding date, and the one person who refuses to be impressed by you, the line between professional and personal doesn't blur so much as it detonates. Zelda and Mr. Santillian are stuck in exactly that kind of impossible situation — orbiting each other in close quarters while pretending the tension between them is strictly logistical. Kate Canterbary builds the stakes quietly at first, then all at once, making it impossible not to root for two people who are each, in their own way, their own worst obstacle.

What sets this book apart is Canterbary's voice — sharp, layered, and funny in ways that earn the laughs rather than beg for them. The epistolary moments woven through the narrative give the dynamic an extra edge, letting both characters say on paper what they can't quite manage out loud. At 400-plus pages, the story has genuine room to breathe, and Canterbary uses that space wisely — building a slow burn that actually builds, with characters complex enough that the resolution feels like something they had to fight to reach.