The best way to describe my experience reading "The House Sitter" is that the novel represents the romantic dream scenarios I make up inside my mind before I go to sleep at night. Those kind of dreams tend to take on a life of their own. That was exactly what this novel felt like to me.
Pippa, the novel's protagonist, goes through a breakup with her long-time boyfriend at the beginning of the book and is left to her own devices. This results in Pippa needing to establish a life for herself from scratch. While the novel is a romance novel, to me, it was also a novel of self-discovery and healing. This journey led her to work as a "house sitter" for the Squire family mansion.
Pippa's emotional journey felt reflected through the state of the mansion, whether or not it be intentional I found it to be a welcome coincidence. This is shown from the novel's beginning when it starts with a throwback describing how lively, stunning, and inviting the Squires' mansion is while simultaneously painting Pippa as a young woman blinded by her wishes and love. After the initial description of the mansion and Pippa, the story is moved to the present time where Pippa is losing herself after her break-up and gets a job at the now falling-apart mansion for the Squires.
"It smelled different; dank and abandoned. Yet there was something vital underneath that scent, a sense of promise."
In addition to the novel reflecting on Pippa's emotional journey, I also appreciated how the author took time to establish Pippa as the person she is which contributed to a complex character whose development I, as the reader, as rooting for.
The romance in the book is of course also worth mentioning. Wolfie, the heir of the Squire mansion, and Pippa seem to find each other throughout the book, with their connection found through mutual understanding. With the main trope being grumpy x sunshine I was expecting banter to create tension, however, the result of the banter created a more hostile feeling as opposed to tension. The romantic aspect of the novel only really took off after the halfway mark, and I suspect that has to do with me connecting more to Pippa's friendships when reflecting on the book. However, it is not to say I did not smile or feel a little giddy while reading the book, I seem to be drawn to questionable men too, but I do wish the establishment of their romantic relationship had been more prominent throughout the entirety of the novel. While I sometimes felt like their romance was chaotic, a bit rushed, and somewhat overwhelming through countless arguments and lack of communication, I was ultimately still rooting for them. I was pleased to see the romance blossom between the two.
I was contemplating what rating to give, and while I ultimately had a good time reading the novel, flying through it within a matter of hours, and loved the characters - Frankie and Mae specifically - I was still left feeling as though the romantic plot line was a bit too chaotic and confused by itself.
With the setting being a small town, yet in a stunning mansion, this felt very 21st-century gothic in the best way. It is quite a great read if you are looking for a charming, but slightly chaotic romance, with characters of emotional complexity.
Thanks to the publisher for providing me with an advanced reading copy via Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.