this book was...strange. sadly, that feels like the most apt term to describe rules for second chances. thanks to a pretty cover, a promising synopsis and a decent first half, I assumed this would receive a high rating by the end. sadly, the gaps in the story really started to grow bothersome by the 60% and grew hard to ignore.
2.5 ★
given the main trope of this book was "marriage in crisis", so much of its success relied upon whether or not the author could convince the audience that the love between tobin and liz was worth saving, that they were deserving each other. this is what I struggled with most. our main characters felt underdeveloped, especially tobin. it would have enhanced the story greatly if it were dual pov, rather than single. in addition to struggling to care about the main couple, what surrounded their journey was so busy and chaotic. there was far too much going on, almost to the point of confusion. grand scenarios lacked set up and description, resulting in having to reread several passages just to make sense of who, where, what, why.
while there was some interesting self-discovery navigated by liz that did some redeeming, I lacked investment in the couple's happy ending by the time the final conflict rolled around after my attention was spread thin across so many (mostly unnecessary) subplots. while rules for second chances had the bones for something good, the execution fell short.
thanks to st. martin's press and maggie north for an advanced copy in exchange for an honest review.