🏠 The House-Sitting Trap by Khloe Olivera 🏠
Key Tropes:
💜 Forced Proximity
🏠 One Bed
💜 Slow Burn
🏠 He Falls First
💜 BIPOC/Queer Reps
Characterization: Tori and Julian are high school sweethearts turned enemies turned friends turned lovers? Tori and Julian are both sympathetic and anointing in the way that you love your best friends but have to stand by and watch them make poor choices at times. They are indecisive-ish and immature, and I think that’s what makes them relatable to most people undergoing a quarter life crisis. They know kinda what they want, don’t have the full means to get there, but can rely on each, only if they trust one another. Tori talks about what it means to be a Latina woman in modern day, and shows the prejudices that she faces. Julian - white, male, privileged family - talks about expectations and how different people place value on others based on those expectations. It’s a great social commentary on the current climate.
Storyline: With a fun mix up, Tori reenters Julian’s life and it might be the second chance he’s looking for to prove himself and gain back Tori’s trust. I love me a good enemies to lovers trope, and given the history wasn’t always based on hatred, it’s angsty and filled with tension, and that’s the exact mood of reading I was looking for when I started this book. It’s a bit predictable, but alas, what romance storyline isn’t these days. I think the side characters and their eventual storylines will be where we see some fun deviation.
Writing Style: Tori’s internal and external dialogue are what make this storyline so humorous and compelling. Julian’s dialogue is what makes you do a *face palm* and laugh, at, not with, and scoff. There’s some epic dialogue between the two and I have so many favorite lines that scream “TRUTH!!” Example: “Siri, fucking decline the call.” “Accepting the call,” Siri’s voice snaps me out of my thoughts. Wait. What?! 😂😂😂
Spice: 🌶️🌶️🌶️
Recommend: Yes! The side characters play a substantial role — it’s not just the two of them. The found family of support and reason really help make this a great modern day mid-twenty year old romance. It’s funny, endearing, and spicy.