Evie was divorced with three young children and Owen was widowed with two of his own when they were introduced by friends. There was no attraction between them, but they came to realize that as working single parents they could help each other with the very real day-to-day problems of childcare. As a practical arrangement, setting up house together worked beautifully, and now that the last child has flown the nest it is time to ditch their unconventional setup and lead their own lives, just as they had always planned. But cutting such strong ties is never going to be easy, and it’s going to be a long and difficult road if they are to separate their lives and home for good.
I really enjoyed the story, but this seriously needs an editor to go through it. They won’t even need a fine-toothed comb, it’s so full of spelling/punctuation errors, incorrect words, and even incorrect character names. There’s no excuse for it.
I don't usually write reviews but thought I had to for this book. I would have rated this book higher as it was an enjoyable read except for one major thing - the incredibly poor job of proofreading - typos, characters mixed up, paragraphs that made little to no sense and learn that "stationAry" is a pArked cAr and "stationEry" is pEns and pEncils. It was so bad I almost gave up partway through. Seriously if you're going to go to all that effort of writing a book for publication, get it properly proofread.
I really enjoyed this book. Set in England with the parents of a merged family with the five children now grown and moved out. The parents sell their home and go their separate ways, because they have never been a 'couple' but shared the parenting in the same house. Lots of interesting things happen. I would have given it a 4 but the editing was abysmal and got progressively worse as the book went on. Shame on the editors
Good romance/family love story about the many ways love manifests itself and how no matter what or who your family is made up if love is there it will blossom.