Two rival chefs in love, marriage of convenience and a dream land to save.
Everyone thought Sullivan and Kia hated each other in culinary school, but they shocked them all by sharing a kiss in the graduation ceremony. After that, they went in separate ways and never saw each other again. Until Kia finds herself buying the land Sullivan has promised her family she’d save, to build a place for food truck owners.
When a fast food company also tries to buy the land, Sullivan and Kia decide to marry to ensure they are the ones getting it first. Kia is the lesser of two devils, but it’s still breaking Sullivan’s heart. Especially because Sullivan is starting to fall in love with the woman who is about to destroy her heart.
Taste the Love was, on paper, the perfect book. But the execution didn’t manage to live up to the amazing premise. First, I loved how Sullivan and Kia met. I adored the idea of two rivals who don’t hate each other, but love to compete to be the best, while also helping each other get better-it made me want to read that story instead.
The premise of Kia and Sullivan not being able to fall in love because they both wanted the same land for different purposes, while having to work together to ensure at least they were the ones getting the land, and not the fast food chain, could have worked as an obstacle if it didn’t have so many plot holes.
Firstly, it was very frustrating that Sullivan always blamed Kia for buying the land, when the fast food company would have bought it if it wasn’t for Kia’s help. Sullivan didn’t have the money to buy the land, so blaming the person who was buying the land when she wouldn’t be able to afford it didn’t make sense to me.
On top of that, if Sullivan’s dream was to ensure the land her grandfather loved was safe, it didn’t make sense that she, being a responsible thirty something year old, decided not to open the letters of the association who owned the land.
Because of that, I was frustrated about Kia spending the whole book apologizing and blaming herself when, in a way, was half-saving the land. Kia could have let the fast food chain buy the land and find another place for food trucks, leaving Sullivan to fix it herself (and she didn’t have the money to stop the deal). While Kia wouldn’t have preserved it, at least she would have made a better space than a fast food company would, and they could figure out a way to preserve part of the green places and use the others for the food trucks.
The most annoying part was that I figured out the solution at the beginning of the book. It was completely out of character that Sullivan hadn’t figured it out. I felt Sullivan spent the whole book pitying herself because Kia was destroying her dream and there was nothing she could do to preserve their love and her beloved land, but taking no action to save it herself.
Lastly, the whole fight with the food company felt unrealistic. Of course a big company can use its money and power to buy the judges and destroy the main character’s lives. But they weren’t being subtle, they used flat villains to blackmail the main characters outside court. They could have recorded the whole thing and make it viral, taking into account Kia was an influencer.
Premise aside, the book was too slow and the inner monologues were repetitive, they kept going through the same feelings for so long. The pacing of the romance was all over the place. Basically they were in love from the beginning, only that it took Sullivan some time to realize it, and then they couldn’t be together because of the whole land thing. I wanted to see why they were so obsessed with each other and see the progression in their feelings, instead of repetitive monologues and a sudden change of heart.
Also, it was mentioned several times that Sullivan had a masculine lesbian vibe that made all the guys fall for her back at school. Like, what?
Finally, I didn’t quite enjoy the audiobook. It didn’t really bring the characters to life and I kept losing attention and having to go back and relistening to it.
I could get going but I think it’s more than enough. I loved the idea of the book and I enjoyed the beginning, but the execution could have been better. I couldn’t stand Sullivan, the pacing was off, the drama wasn’t realistic and the story had way more pages than it needed to be.
Overall, I’m annoyed because I loved the premise and the cover but the story didn’t live up to them. I would have rather read the story of them falling in love while being rivals in culinary school.
🎧Read as an audiobook
I kindly received an ARC from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review. All thoughts and opinions are my own.