![]() Every week in middle school and high school, I would read it with my dad. Essentially, I grew up in Boston reading the Boston Globe Magazine, and they have this column every week called “ Dinner with Cupid,” in which an editor sets up two people on a blind date and then interviews them about how the date went. I wanted the freedom to explore and play around with new characters and different ideas and plotlines, so the matchmaking elements are certainly inspired by real life, but to me it felt much more satisfying and creative to make that my own. ![]() ![]() I thought it would be a really fun setting for a rom-com, which is the kind of book I always wanted to write because it’s what I like to read the most. I loved the idea of writing about the world of matchmaking because it’s such a unique job that I don’t really see portrayed that much in pop culture. ![]() I don’t really have any interest in writing non-fiction. Considering you have real matchmaking experience, why did you decide to write this story through fiction as opposed to non-fiction? ![]()
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