The Hating Game by Sally Thorne
The Hating Game by Sally Thorne

Romance · 2016

The Hating Game review

by Sally Thorne

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The verdict

Lucy Hutton and Joshua Templeman are co-assistants to the joint CEOs of a publishing company formed by a merger, sharing a tiny office, facing each other across identical desks, and conducting an elaborate cold war of small competitions and veiled hostilities.

Best for curious readers in the genre. Reading time: 6h 15m.

The Hating Game by Sally Thorne
The Hating Game by Sally Thorne

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What it argues

Lucy Hutton and Joshua Templeman are co-assistants to the joint CEOs of a publishing company formed by a merger, sharing a tiny office, facing each other across identical desks, and conducting an elaborate cold war of small competitions and veiled hostilities. Lucy is warm, compulsively accommodating, and has built an entire career out of being liked. Joshua is cold, precise, devastating in meetings, and apparently incapable of normal human expression. They have been playing the hating game for months when the novel opens, and the reader immediately understands — even if Lucy doesn't — what that game is really about.

The Hating Game is the novel that revived the enemies-to-lovers romance as a serious commercial category. Thorne's achievement is making the slow burn feel genuinely earned: Lucy and Joshua's antagonism has the specific texture of two people who have been studying each other obsessively, and the gradual revelation that obsession is mutual is the novel's primary pleasure. The office setting — confined, hierarchical, rule-governed — creates exactly the right kind of pressure cooker.

What it gets right

  1. 1.

    Thorne uses the physical confinement of the shared office brilliantly — two people who cannot escape each other without quitting creates a pressure that the novel exploits for both comedy and tension.

  2. 2.

    Lucy's compulsive people-pleasing is presented as both charming and problematic — the novel uses her relationship with Joshua to examine what she costs herself by always accommodating others.

  3. 3.

    Joshua's emotional opacity is the novel's structural bet: Thorne keeps him opaque long enough that the reader and Lucy are genuinely uncertain what he feels, and the revelation lands with force.

What it covers

Who wrote it

Sally Thorne is an Australian author who wrote The Hating Game as her debut novel, first self-publishing it before it was picked up and became an international bestseller. She followed it with 99 Percent Mine and Second First Impressions. The Hating Game was adapted into a 2021 film starring Lucy Hale and Austin Stowell. Thorne is credited with helping revitalize the enemies-to-lovers romance subgenre and inspiring a generation of romance writers. She lives in Sydney.

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