Always entertaining, Patrick’s novels always leave me feeling positive as she weaves heart-felt inner struggle and every-day circumstances with some overriding quest—usually using an unveiling of the past—and always a bit unexpected, realistic, and satisfactory conclusion. In this novel, Carla is planning her wedding to Tom who she has matched with using her own company, Logical Love, a scientific match-making service. Her family believes they are cursed in love and are steeped in superstition, often consulting a fortune teller and Tarot cards to guide their decisions. Carla is the most logical of the bunch and the tensions between the hilarity of the exaggerated aunts and cousins’ beliefs and practices and her mission to uncover her own past, also lead her to discover family secrets as she tries to decide if Tom is the “one.” She is a compelling CH, well-designed, even if, at times, I grew tired of her repeated internal debates. Her grandmother, sister, fiancé, other aforementioned family members and new friends, Babs and Diego, and ex-husband all add to the cast of humorous CHs and interactions with great dialogue and text messages. The settings ranges from her grandmother’s London bungalow and Carla’s business to the details of her travels to Spain, Portugal, Amsterdam, Sardinia, and Paris with the cultural nods to food, drink, and Carla’s various clothing dilemmas. Like most of Patrick’s other novels, the twist comes unexpectedly, there are multiple resolutions, and the generations offer their own viewpoints using humor and sincere emotion. Parenthood, sister and family dynamics, and the scientific vs the emotional path to love vibrates as themes in this enjoyable, literal and mental travelogue story. The occult plays out in a variety of levels, historical and metaphorical. RED FLAG: Miscarriage. Readalikes may be Fredrik Bachman, Rachel Joyce, and Nina George. And for some occult tinges, perhaps Brunonia Barry’s The Lace Reader.