When sharp-tongued city journalist Eliza Dalton is sent to write a glossy lifestyle piece on a picture-perfect English village, she expects boredom, hypocrisy, and a quick escape back to London. What she doesn't expect is Upper Wobbleton-a place where nothing is quite as simple as it looks, and where charm can be as dangerous as scandal.
Nor does she expect The Wonky Pint.
Run by the infuriatingly reserved Fitzwilliam Darcy, the village pub is more than a cosy refuge from the rain. It is the heart of the community-and it's under threat. Developers are circling, finances are failing, and the future of the pub hangs by a thread. To Eliza, it looks like the perfect story. To Fitz, she looks like the last person who should be telling it.
As Eliza digs for the "gritty truth" her editor demands, she finds herself pulled into the rhythms of village life: fiercely competitive pub quizzes, long-held grudges, quiet loyalties, and a community bound together by far more than nostalgia. And as her professional detachment begins to crack, so does her certainty about what success, ambition, and truth really mean.
Witty, warm, and sharply observed, Pints and Prejudice is a modern reimagining of classic romantic tensions-city and country, cynicism and sincerity, independence and belonging. It's a story about what we protect, what we misunderstand, and what happens when we finally stop looking for flaws long enough to see what truly matters.
Perfect for readers who love intelligent romantic fiction, small-town stories with bite, and novels that balance humour with heart, Pints and Prejudice proves that sometimes the most surprising journeys begin with the wrong assignment-and a very good pint.