B&N Synopsis:
"By day, Petra Flint is a talented jeweler working in a lively London studio. By night, she's a sleepwalker troubled by a past she can't put to bed and a present that leaves her clinging to an unsuitable boyfriend. Arlo Savidge was once a budding heartthrob musician. Then tragedy struck and he chose to forsake stardom and all future affairs of the heart for a quiet life in the countryside as a music teacher.
Petra and Arlo haven't seen each other since they were teenagers-when their feelings ran deep but the timing wasn't right. Now, seventeen years later, they run into each other once more. Might first love get a second chance-or will what keeps them up at night keep them apart forever?"
I am the first to admit that I normally do not read this type of fiction. However, I have been trying to expand my reading horizons, and the Nook free Fridays have really helped to do that, with mixed results, but I am grateful for the chance to experience them.
I also love most things British/UK, although at times the humor escapes me. This book was a little hard to read, not in terms of language but in writing style. It was slow going for me. Plodding along is the description I would use. I thought the subject was at least interesting - not having much experience with sleepwalking. I also thought Petra's job to be interesting, I just thought it amazing that she could make a living at jewelry making - but then, what do I know about that? Obviously not as much as I should, maybe.
I enjoyed the bits that were pure British slang and references, and admit that I had to look up a couple, even though I figured out most from the context. The sleepwalking provided a plot twist, and I just thought what a horrible thing to deal with, no sleep. How these people aren't zombies walking around, I'll never understand. I liked Petra and Arlo, but didn't feel like Petra was properly connected to her life. I didn't feel her. She felt the same, whether she was hurt by Rob, or hurt by Arlo, or her parents. It all seemed rather detached to me. I also couldn't understand how she wasn't messed up by her parent's lack of regard. I don't know why I felt such detachment from this character's life. Her inner life never seemed to match the outter, and vice-versa. Her friends - it was like they knew what was going on, and seemed to know her well - but I couldn't see why.
I'm not saying that ultimately I didn't enjoy it. I did. And I was entertained, and liked the journey, overall. Its just not my usual cup of tea, and I don't think it is something I will go back to again. I don't like feeling so disconnected from the events that happen and the characters involved, and I honestly don't know why I felt that way, except it might have worked better for me as a first-person narrative.