Wow! Rhett & Ava’s Emotional Romance Comes To A Feel-Good Conclusion. Their Story Really Grew On Me. They Come From Different Worlds, But A Brief Chance Encounter Is All It Takes For Them To Know That They Belong Together. Ava Tries To Run From Rhett’s Magnetic Pull, But Their Chemistry Is Undeniable. They Each Have Baggage That Weighs Them Down, Threatening To Destroy Their Fragile Happiness.
This is book two of the Blackwood series. It is the conclusion of Rhett and Ava’s story. The series consists of four books – two duets. Siblings Rhett and Valerie are born into a life of privilege. These are their stories.
The Blackwood series includes:
The Only One Duet:
1. A Reason To Stay (Rhett & Ava’s story, part 1)
2. The Only One (Rhett & Ava’s story, part 2)
Forever Yours Duet:
3. A Reason To Leave (Liam & Valerie’s story, part 1)
4. Forever Yours (Liam & Valerie’s story, part 2)
ABOUT THE BLACKWOOD FAMILY:
Charles and Vivian Blackwood may live a life of opulent luxury, but the Blackwood family’s wealth and connections are new money. An entrepreneur, Charles began working on his fortune after finishing college when he started Blackwood Industries. Today, he is a self-made billionaire. Vivien enjoys working on charity events and dabbles in decoration. Though they are based out of New York, private jets give the family the flexibility to travel at a moment’s notice.
The press follows the Blackwoods’ business pursuits, and the attention spills over into the tabloids occasionally as well. The guest lists for their parties include a who’s who of the rich and famous. Despite all the pressures of high-stakes business deals and the distractions of living in the spotlight, the Blackwoods have a tight family. Charles and Vivian are supportive parents and surprisingly approachable, not hardened by their wealth.
FROM A REASON TO STAY, BOOK 1:
The story opens in the fall near Wellesley College, just outside of Boston.
Ava Conner, roughly twenty-one, is hard-working and stubbornly independent. She is beginning her senior year at Wellesley College where she is studying architecture. She fell in love with design as a little girl and is now working on her applications to graduate school. With her best friend since grade school at her side, Ava had left her hometown of Litchfield, Connecticut after graduating from high school three years ago, determined to make her own way in the world. She loves her family dearly, but she learned a hard lesson about depending upon others when she caught her high school boyfriend Chris cheating on her the summer before freshman year. Refusing any financial support from her family, she has worked her way through college ever since.
Ava began waiting tables at Christopher’s her freshman year. Named after its owner and sought-after chef, the high-class restaurant has no trouble drawing customers thanks to it proximity to Boston. It has become a second home of sorts to Ava over the years. She and her co-workers enjoy hanging out after hours, and sometimes her best friend Lizzie joins them. Ava treasures those friendships. Stephen and his younger brother Mike are especially dear – they feel like brothers to her. Stephen is handsome and popular with the women, but he always has time for Ava. Mike is handsome as well, but unlike Stephen, he has a reserved personality and is happier sitting on the sidelines. Despite the long hours devoted to school and work, Ava enjoys the company of her close group of friends.
Ava and Lizzie occasionally return home to Litchfield to catch up with their families. Nana is full of spunk and personality. She dotes on Ava, but she causes endless headaches for Ava’s mother. Ava adores her father, a kind man who exudes a quiet strength. Her mother is now caught up in the wedding planning for Ava’s sister’s wedding. Emily and her fiancé Jackson will finally exchange vows in the spring. Ava is so happy for them; they make a perfect couple. As for Ava, she has not considered dating since Chris broke her heart and her trust. Lizzie teases that Ava lives like a nun, and there is a little truth to it.
When Ava literally runs into a stranger one morning as she rushes to an exam, she finds herself dazed and confused. Just one look, one brief touch, is all it takes to shift her off her axis. After years of immunity to the charms of men, she suddenly finds herself drawn to the handsome and magnetic man. Every time he pops up again she runs, knowing her defenses won’t work against him. Her trust is still shattered, so she shies from making her heart vulnerable again. Eventually, however, she can no longer ignore him.
Rhett Blackwood, twenty-six, recently moved to Boston. After graduating with his master’s degree from Harvard just over three years ago, he went to work with his father at Blackwood Industries in New York City. It was some newer investments in Boston that led to his decision to relocate. Rhett’s name appears in business journals and tabloids alike, where he is pictured with a parade of blondes. One such blonde is Serena Archibald, the daughter of Charles Blackwood’s long-time best friend and business associate.
Ava has been cheated on in the past, so she is reluctant to give in to temptation. She isn’t the only one with misgivings, though; Rhett has also triggered Stephen’s protective instincts. He believes Rhett will leave her broken-hearted just like Chris, and he tries to warn her off. This creates a further complication as Rhett assigns other motives to Stephen.
Serena acts possessive of Rhett, and he allows it, though without encouraging it. Rhett insists he and Serena are strictly friends, but there must be a story he isn’t sharing. Serena appears to be exactly his type. Ava, on the other hand, is a petite brunette, not a blonde supermodel type. She dresses modestly and comes from humble beginnings. She doesn’t understand Rhett’s supposed attraction to her, but denying their insane chemistry is impossible. The couple faces challenges as they struggle to make a relationship work. This story ends in a devastating cliffhanger.
IN THIS BOOK:
This book opens in June. Just over two years have passed since Ava moved to the L.A. area (note my comments below about issues with the timeline).
As book one came to a close, an argument followed by misunderstandings led to Rhett and Ava’s separation. On the evening following Ava’s graduation, Ava told Rhett the truth she had uncovered about Serena, and in his state of confusion, Rhett stumbled. Given the complicated emotions behind his relationship with Serena, his mistakes were forgivable in the long run, but he certainly caused damage in the short term. He tried to correct his mistake, but in the meantime, Ava was called that same night to her father’s side as cancer finally took his life. Ava fell into a cloud of grief with the loss of both Rhett and her father in one evening. She had no idea that Rhett had tried to make it to her that night, nor that he had since been in communication with her friends and family. There was no good explanation for why he took weeks to settle the situation with Serena yet didn’t find the time to make a brief visit. Nor was there a good reason why Ava’s friends and family failed to let her know about his inquiries. One would have expected that their concern for her happiness would have led them to fill her in and give her something to be hopeful for rather than let her sink further into darkness. It led to Ava choosing to make a fresh start. She chose a graduate program in California and left a few weeks after her father passed, probably in late May. Rhett caught her as she was packing, but his normal confidence was replaced with hesitation. Ava demanded that he leave, and he willingly walked away. The story ended with Rhett’s promise to wait for Ava while also allowing her the space she needed.
This story opens with a prologue in Rhett’s point of view before slipping back into Ava’s story. The prologue takes a step back three years in time to the moment Rhett first saw Ava in the coffee bar near Wellesley – which was roughly October. The story thus picks up three years from when Rhett and Ava first crossed paths. The prologue concludes when Rhett saw Ava in his club the weekend before Thanksgiving.
Ava Conner, now roughly twenty-four, has built a life for herself in California. The last two years have been a time for healing and rebuilding. She got an internship at a tiny architectural firm upon her arrival in L.A. and worked her way through her master’s degree program. She recently finished her degree, and now she works full-time at Willis & Associates, where she had interned. Tom Willis, her boss, values her contributions. Her co-worker Jocelyn has become a good friend, and recent hire Drew is always entertaining. Ava’s small Santa Monica apartment offers a calming ocean view that settles her restless mind, and morning runs on the beach help to clear her head. She has grown to love living near the ocean; nevertheless, she wonders if she ought to move back to the East Coast someday. She misses her family.
Ava has tried moving on from Rhett Blackwood, but he is a hard act to follow. Finding a man that compares is impossible. She has tried dating, but it usually never gets past the first date. It doesn’t help knowing that Rhett still has relationships with her friends and family back home. Though she has forbidden anyone from discussing Rhett with her, she hasn’t been able to avoid hearing about him. Since his father’s recent retirement, Rhett’s name has been in the news and tabloids more than ever. He has moved back to New York to run Blackwood Industries, and he is the most eligible bachelor in the city. He hasn’t been photographed with any women, interestingly, except for his sister Valerie. Ava can hardly complain about Rhett’s continued relationships with her friends and family since she and Valerie have remained friends as well. With Valerie’s eye on attending USC in the fall, Ava looks forward to finally being able to spend some time with her young friend.
It is like déjà vu when Ava runs into Rhett one day while hurrying to meet with a new client. Being in Rhett’s presence again is a shock to her system, and it soon becomes obvious that no amount of time will ever erase the magnetic pull that binds them together.
Rhett Blackwood, now roughly twenty-nine, has worked tirelessly since taking over his father’s company. And while his parents are celebrating their recent retirement with a trip abroad, responsibility for Valerie falls on his shoulders. Chaperoning her visit to the USC campus presents the perfect opportunity to finally make his reappearance in Ava’s life. He meant what he said when he told her he would wait for her, and with recent developments, he has finally decided to take matters into his own hands. The couple’s reunion is far from easy, though. With so many hurt feelings and misunderstandings, they are hardly on the same page. Time has strengthened the gulf between them, but their fated paths were always meant to merge. The couple faces several challenges as they work through the past and look to the future, but they finally earn a happy-for-now ending.
A Reason To Leave, book three in the series, follows. It is the first book in the Forever Yours Duet, which is Liam Stone and Valerie Blackwood’s story.
Wow! Rhett and Ava’s emotional romance comes to a feel-good conclusion. Their story is about guilt and fear. Rhett’s guilt paralyzes him, jeopardizing his relationship with Ava. Ava’s fear does the same. She runs from Rhett repeatedly. It is only his persistence that allows him to get past her defenses. That explains why so much time lapses when he chooses to let her go. Her stubborn personality would never allow her to reach out to him first. He would have known that, so his lack of effort is a bit confusing given his commitment to come for her. Ava’s avoidance is also a symptom of her fear. She has an acute fear of difficult conversations. Even when she knows that the difficulties will multiply the longer she ignores said conversations, she nevertheless finds an endless list of excuses to justify her procrastination. First, she avoids talking to Rhett, or about Rhett, for over two years. She also avoids telling Tom and her coworkers about her relationship with Rhett. She avoids telling Owen about Rhett, and she also avoids telling Rhett about seeing Owen at the bar. Rhett and Ava must work through their guilt and fears in order to achieve their happy ending.
The prologue is very insightful, offering a peak into Rhett’s mind. It shows how meeting Ava instantly changed him and led him to believe in fate. His meeting with his father sheds light on his life before Ava. The guilt he carried from the Serena fiasco had weighed on him in the years that followed. He lived in darkness, losing himself to alcohol and women to numb his guilty conscience. Ava didn’t erase that guilt, but it did give him a new direction. His focus shifted from wasting his youth to applying himself to his work. Ava gave him a future to live for. He knew that in Ava, he had found the only one for him.
There are a few issues that merit mention. It seems incomprehensible that so much time has passed without the couple communicating. Given that they have friends in common, it seems impossible in spite of Ava’s claims. It would only have taken a sentence or two from a friend or family member to enlighten her about her mistaken judgment. The arguments she claimed to have had would certainly have allowed that information to slip. You are almost forced to buy into a conspiracy against her happiness. And since Rhett never gave up on her, it seems extremely out of character for him to sit back for so long. I can envision him setting a time limit on the space he gives her – such as six months to grieve or two years to finish her degree (even that is a stretch). In the end, he never even made the decision to go after her; the impetus was only a sudden need to protect her. There is a difference between deciding he wants to fix things and being forced to take action for her protection. He knows how stubborn Ava is, so waiting on her was a pointless exercise. I am left to believe that short of his concerns about her safety, he might have sat on the sidelines and watched her go on to marry and have a family. Riley mentions that Rhett had been a mess during their separation, but that mess is never defined. It also doesn’t seem to be accurate. He seemed withdrawn, perhaps, but not a mess. The gap in time is too out of character for Rhett, and it makes the story feel inauthentic and manufactured.
There are a number of unresolved issues at the end of the story. First, Rhett’s work tendencies don’t seem to be resolved. There was a quick but poignant piece of advice given, but so far, his daily routine didn’t seem terribly changed. Next, Rhett’s uncharacteristic complacency during Ava’s absence was never explained. We don’t know what held him back. Riley claimed Rhett had been in bad shape the last couple of years, but from all appearances, Rhett’s life was in much better shape than it had been prior to meeting Ava. He seemed to work endlessly, but his days of partying were in the past. It is all rather confusing. Riley’s storyline is also unresolved. His part is minor, but it still leaves a void when he seemingly fizzles out at the end. His relationship with Rhett, in particular, needs a concise resolution. Rhett’s friend Adam is never mentioned, which leaves a question mark about how things settled with Adam after the close of book one. It would be nice to know if Riley’s friendship with Adam was impacted as well. Finally, there is confusion about Ava wanting to move back home, then suddenly loving life in California. It feels disconnected, and her desire to move closer to her family is never resolved.
Finally, the timeline has issues. The prologue goes back three years in time to the day Rhett and Ava met, roughly October of that year. This story thus opens three years from the day they met. It is now June, however, so one can only deduce that it is nearly three years since the day they first crossed paths. At the close of book two, it was roughly the end of May as Ava drove across the country for a fresh start in California. That means it is just a hair past two years since she moved away. This makes sense, since she just finished her degree, and most master’s programs last one to two years. She finished earlier in the year … which likely would mean in May, just a month earlier, or if on a quarter system, perhaps in March. This is confirmed when Ava claims to have been in California just over two years. After that, though, the story slips into a three-year gap. I have too much trouble believing that Rhett stayed away for three years while fully intending to remain committed to their relationship. He didn’t even seem to have a plan. As mentioned above, this is out of character. I would have preferred it if the story picked up six months later, perhaps at the end of Ava’s first semester in graduate school. That would have felt authentic and avoided the unrealistic drama.
Rhett and Ava’s steamy romance picks up in California two years later in the conclusion to their story. There were five teary scenes by my count in this heartfelt read. The plot is somewhat simple. There is a little suspense thrown in the mix to keep things interesting. Fans will be happy to see that most of the characters from book one make an appearance here. I loved the conclusion, but I would have enjoyed a glimpse at the couple’s happy ending; it could have been written without giving away Valerie’s story. The characters are varied and interesting. Ava’s character is well-defined. I love Rhett’s character, but there are some inconsistencies and confusing gaps in his story. The story is told in first person in Ava’s POV, with the prologue in Rhett’s POV. I rate this book four stars.
I received an advance copy of this book and am voluntarily leaving a review.