Don’t mind me just updating with more accurate ratings 👀
I anticipate a lot of readers enjoying this book, certainly if the current 5 star reviews are any indication. This book is a romance, but given the author and style, it's being billed more as a literary romance, which is a tricky (non) genre. The main character, Sally Milz, is a successful writer on a fictionalized version of SNL, where, when the novel opens, the show is about to be hosted by an aging but extremely handsome and successful male musician (let's say an older Harry Styles - I know we can't make every fictional musician Harry Styles...but at the same time...can't we though?).
What follows for over 40% of the book is an extremely detailed look at the week leading up to the weekly performance, and when I say the detail is painstaking, I mean PAINSTAKING. We learn every part of this process, we walk through it, we hear about every skit. We hear about skits that don't make it on the show. We hear about past skits, relevant bits, and we meet a lot of the staff. Of course, over this week, Sally and our host, Noah, meet and hit it off, Sally impressing Noah with her humor and capability, Noah impressing Sally with his charm and likability (and hotness let's just be honest).
While this section was perhaps a BIT too indulgent and detailed (especially because this is a blatant ripoff of an existing TV show, so at a certain point, the cultural recognition should kick in and perhaps eliminate some of the extraneous details here), I did enjoy reading it. I read this section largely in one day, so while I have some criticisms (did we really learn much about Noah beyond "he's hot and charming? No. Do we really witness Sally being humorous at all? No), I found the character dynamics likable enough, the situations just awkward or human enough to be interesting. At this point I was considering this a solid 4 star read.
Then the second section happened. And for 20% of this book, I read through pages and pages (and PAGES AND PAGES) of emails between adults. I mean...not like the cute little emails sometimes used in romance novel plot devices. I am talking 10 paragraph emails responding back to side notes in the previous email, point-by-point playback of where they stand on each individual issue (some of this was admittedly charming; some of it was incredibly cringe and perhaps a bit forced and performative regarding a few social issues). I honestly wanted this to end on every single page. I almost skipped ahead to see when it would, and worried that if it didn't, I would have to DNF. I found it incredibly hard to buy chemistry via email in such lengthy and over-detailed fashion, particularly when the characters hadn't had much interaction before this. I also was just pretty bored.
By the time the characters actually meet up again, it becomes clear why these emails were needed (and not just for the obvious plot reason given, as I assume that could have been altered if needed quite easily. Rather I assume the emails were chosen as a way to get the characters back in contact, and then the plot reason was given afterward). These two don't really seem to discuss much. When they're together, while there are physical moments in the book, the actual on page chemistry is largely missing. I felt ultimately just a bit disappointed that I had read up to this point for so little payoff and such a rushed ending, even though it was fine in terms of how it played out.
I do want to note just briefly: one of my biggest struggles with this book was the character of Sally. We're in her head, and she's certainly our sympathetic viewpoint character. I liked her descriptions of her part in her show, and I bought why she would be interested in Noah. I also understood the point of exploring her insecurities (not a perfect model, size 2 woman, dating an internationally recognized sex symbol), but WOW I got sick of the way their conflicts played out. I personally did not find it feminist, unique, or "literary" to watch a woman have the exact same issue at start, middle, and end of novel with being with a man, primarily her own insecurities. There are more details of how this played out that bothered me that I will skip for the sake of time, but while I think feelings of insecurity are certainly relatable, I ultimately just found these characters largely flat and two-dimensional, and a large part of it was the insane way that these insecurities and the ensuing conflict became perhaps the centerpiece of their relationship. I read this book two days ago and truthfully can't remember much else.
Finally, I want to say up front I doubt any of what I'm about to say is Sittenfeld's fault or intention, but I think it's worth mentioning in my review of this book for other romance readers, and this is super preachy/soapbox Hillary, so feel free to skip:
I'm very very open to literary romances, or literary "romantic" books without traditional HEAs (not my implication either way with this book). I am a big fan of Sally Rooney, and I take no issue with playing with tropes or writing books that perhaps feel like genre crossover. At the same time, I won't lie: when I see a bunch of reviews saying "I don't read much romance, but I loved this because it wasn't cheesy," I do get really wary. Not because we shouldn't allow books to push genre boundaries or follow formulas or writing styles we don't expect, but because I'm suspicious of books that are branded and marketed as "not like other romances" where the push is to set them apart as their own superior brand, and where many many early reviews are not from traditional romance readers. In this case, I have to say this worked against the book for me. I expected extremely elevated character dynamics and writing. I expected a story that played deeply with human emotions. I am not sure this book delivered on those expectations. I am not sure it was originally intended to, but that is sometimes what happens when "traditional romance" is branded as cheesy, and certain books are marketed as being somewhat above it. Again...not Sittenfeld's fault, and not something that should necessarily impact your enjoyment of the book, but it is something that bothers me. I've read many great traditional romances with character depth, sparkling dialogue, and deep emotional centers.
Anyway, ultimately Sittenfeld is a strong writer, and the TV part of this book is really fun in a lot of ways. I think many will love this book. Unfortunately, it did not live up to the hype for me.