Talk Bookish to Me by Kate Bromley

Title: Talk Bookish to Me
Author: Kate Bromley
Format: eBook
Genre(s): Romance
Rating: ★☆☆☆☆

This was the kind of debut novel that started out surprisingly well and then turned into a bit of a nightmare for me. I wanted to rate the author higher for her potential, for how the book started (multi-faceted characters, engaging style, enough detail to feel real without bogging down the plot), but I was too disturbed by the way everything played out to recommend this book.

Kara’s backstory gave me a stomachache, but in the sense that it felt very real and well-described — I empathized with her and Ryan’s past a little too much for comfort, and was eager to see how they handled it. Unfortunately, I didn’t feel like that past was really handled at all, with Kara and Ryan seeming to forgive and forget too easily until the final conflict when everything blew up … and then was patched up after a long period of self-reflection and with a sort of “we’re meant for each other” attitude that I felt was both unrealistic and kind of gross given their history. I would have much preferred to see a romance where Kara had this backstory and then worked through her hangups with a new love interest, rather than a second-chance romance with someone who I didn’t feel earned his second chance.

Love Your Life by Sophie Kinsella (DNF)

Title: Love Your Life
Author: Sophie Kinsella
Genre(s): Romance
Rating: ★☆☆☆☆

I picked this up from my library as a light-hearted, contemporary romance story I could listen to in audiobook format while doing chores around the house. Sadly, it was a DNF for me. The main character was too naïve, clueless, and melodramatic for me to get interested in her. And the idea that the two characters thought they were in love (rather than just infatuated) having only spent a holiday together in which they refused to share personal details about themselves? I stuck with it long enough to see them get back home and start to learn about each other’s real lives and everyday personalities, and it all just felt so unreal and ridiculous that I couldn’t continue.