5 Answers
If you’re hoping for a free PDF of 'Unromance', I’ll be blunt: there isn’t a legitimate one available for general download because it’s a trade book published by Forever/Grand Central. The ethical and risk-free approaches I use are borrowing from my library’s digital apps (Libby/OverDrive or Hoopla), checking retailer previews, or waiting for sales. Libraries and e-lending services do carry the title, and the author’s site points readers to where to buy or borrow it. Personally, I prefer snagging a library copy when possible — it’s free, supports the book ecosystem, and gets me reading without guilt.
My bookshelf brain lights up at this kind of question — I love helping people find legal ways to read books. 'Unromance' is a recently published rom-com by Erin Connor, so it isn’t in the public domain and you won’t find a legitimate, full free PDF hosted by the publisher or author. The author’s site and publisher note it’s out now and sold through normal retail channels. If you want it without paying retail price, the easiest legal route is to borrow it through your public library’s digital services. Many U.S. libraries carry contemporary titles in OverDrive/Libby or Hoopla, and listings show 'Unromance' appears in library catalogs and on e-lending platforms. Put a hold in your library app or request an interlibrary loan if your branch doesn’t have a copy. For a quick peek before you borrow or buy, retailers like Kobo and Apple Books offer preview samples so you can read the first chapters for free; NetGalley once hosted early review copies but that listing is archived now. If you want a free, legal way to decide, try the sample on a retailer page and then place a library hold. Personally, I’d grab the sample and queue it on Libby — it saved me money and gave me a great read.
I hunted this down because I wanted to be sure: 'Unromance' by Erin Connor is a recent, commercially published title, so no legitimate full free PDF is available from the publisher or author. Your best legal options are borrowing from a library’s digital collection (OverDrive/Libby, Hoopla) or reading the free preview on retailer sites like Kobo or Apple Books. Libraries and e-lending platforms do list the title, so try placing a hold.
Okay, quick practical route from my experience: don’t download random ‘free PDFs’ — for 'Unromance' that would likely be infringing. Instead, search your local library’s catalog and Libby/OverDrive first; many libraries added the book to their collections after publication, so you can often borrow the ebook or audiobook for free with your library card. If your branch doesn’t have it, request it via interlibrary loan or an acquisition request. If you want instant access and are willing to pay a little, retailers like Kobo and Apple Books sell the ebook and offer a free sample so you can read a chunk without spending anything. Also keep an eye on the author’s site and publisher for occasional promotions or giveaways, and note that early review copies on NetGalley have been archived, so that route isn’t open anymore.
This one’s straightforward: 'Unromance' is a commercially published novel, so there’s no official full free PDF floating legally online. If someone posts a complete PDF for free, that’s almost always an unauthorized copy. I’d steer clear — piracy hurts authors and publishers. Instead, check your library’s ebook apps (Libby/OverDrive or Hoopla) — many libraries list 'Unromance' in their catalogs or have access through OverDrive/partner platforms, so you can borrow it legally at no cost. If borrowing isn’t possible right away, retailers let you preview the book for free (first chapters), and sometimes publishers or the author run giveaways, so follow Erin Connor’s official page or the Forever/Grand Central publishing page for any promotions. Buying an ebook or used paperback is the other obvious route if you want immediate access.