New York Times bestselling author Alice Hoffman takes her sweet bookshop series to Paris with an emotional short story about chasing your dreams—and finding your passion where you least expect it.
Growing up, Violet was so busy helping others realize their dreams, she found little time to pursue her own. But five years ago, she took the chance of a lifetime, leaving the family bookshop on Brinkley’s Island, Maine, to attend culinary school in Paris. Now she’s working her dream job as a pâtissiere in an upscale Parisian restaurant—yet all she can think about is home.
Feeling unmoored, Violet finds herself still searching for something…Connection? Maybe. She hasn’t made any real friends in the city. Inspiration? Possibly. Her desserts are lovely, but they’re definitely lacking something.
After her aunt Isabel urges her to keep on looking, Violet finally gets a taste of what she’s been missing in the café at the Museum of Romantic Life. But just as life begins to come into focus, she’s abruptly called home to Maine. Like her aunt before her, Violet soon learns that family could hold the key to discovering what she truly needs.
Alice Hoffman is the author of more than thirty works of fiction, including The World That We Knew; The Marriage of Opposites; The Red Garden; The Museum of Extraordinary Things; The Dovekeepers; Here on Earth, an Oprah’s Book Club selection; and the Practical Magic series, including Practical Magic; Magic Lessons; The Rules of Magic, a selection of Reese’s Book Club; and The Book of Magic. She lives near Boston.
I have enjoyed a number of Alice Hoffmann’s novels and stories from the more serious to those filled with magic to those sweet family stories. This fourth story in The Once Upon a Time Bookshop Stories is sweet , in more ways than one and sad , and it’s filled with love, a simple, predictable story that did me good ! I hope this isn’t the last of the series.
The Bookstore Family feels like it could be the perfect ending to this lovely series. Book 4 brings everything—love, hope, heartbreak, goodbyes, and new beginnings. I absolutely loved it.
It’s a short read, but it really delivers. This time, we follow Violet as she runs off to Paris, meets a charming man, and then has to return home when her mother falls ill. And yes—you guessed it—the handsome guy stays behind in Paris.
What follows is the sweetest snail mail romance that totally warmed my heart. Such a beautiful story. I loved every page.
The fourth and maybe the final book in the Once Upon a Time Bookshop Stories series
It was lovely to meet up with the family again although this book begins in Paris where Violet is working as a pâtissier in a restaurant. Despite herself she meets a man she could love but then she has to return home where her mother is battling cancer.
So it is a story with sad moments and happy ones too and it effectively ties up all the loose ends for everyone concerned. I enjoyed it very much.
Thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read and review this book.
I had read and enjoyed the three previous short stories that tell us about the lives of Sophie, Isabel and Violet and it was only sensible I read the 4th short story in the series.
Sophie and Isabel have already gone through all the possible emotions a human being can experience throughout their lives (joy, sadness, anger, despair, hope, love...and more). It is now Violet's turn to take her own path, make her own decisions and allow herself the opportunity to experience such emotions. After all, a person cannot be fully complete until they have learned to experience them all. However, being able to share our experiences with family and friends is a treasure that not all are fortunate to have.
Violet hasn't really been in love and that shows on most things she does because they seem to be lacking something special. Will love knock her door? It all seems to point out that way, but then again, life is full of surprises that can make us change paths over and over.
But...even if life forces Violet to take different paths...will she actually be able to get what she most desires?
This seems to be the last book in the series (I hope not), but if another one comes up in the future, I'll be glad to get hold of it.
So nice to read a book that you can finish in one sitting. Apparently this is the 4th, and maybe final, installment in this series but it is the first one I have read and I enjoyed the premise of the local girl/pasty chef who moved to Paris and returns to be near her dying mother just as she finds love. A touching story about love and even how the missing ingredient in her pastry was love. I enjoyed it a lot and while the entire plot was very fast and simple, that is why it is a short story and I am fine with that! 3.5***
I find it hard to believe that this was written by the author of Practical Magic (or a human at all - this reads as if AI attempted to write an Alice Hoffman book). It’s just a clunky, amateurish, weak and thin effort that reads like fan fiction/cozy chick lit.
Lovely fourth novella in this series about two sisters and a bookshop on a small Maine island. The saga continues, and maybe ends here? A great place to finish, so hopefully this will be the last. I loved this one the most I think, four full boxes of tissues.
Regardless, it’s not the best, but still has beautiful prose and quotes only Alice Hoffman can create. This is the fourth in the Once Upon a Bookshop series, all short stories. The first two captivated me - what great descriptions of the Gibson family, who deal with great losses, loves, and family business successes.
This time, it takes place in Paris, where Violet currently lives, and is using her mom's infamous recipes to bake in a completely different country. She realizes that Maine is where her heart truly is.
These stories could be expansive, but Hoffman manages to turn them into deep characterizations of a family's loves and losses.
The Bookstore Family by Alice Hoffman is a warm, character-driven novella set in a small New England town, centered around a family who owns a struggling bookstore. The story focuses on relationships, secrets, and the complicated ways families love and hurt one another. Hoffman’s writing is gentle and reflective, with a quiet emotional pull rather than big dramatic moments. It’s a thoughtful read about connection, healing, and the comfort of books.
I was going through my NetGalley reading list and realized I hadn’t reviewed Alice Hoffman’s new novella. I started reading and, nope, it felt completely new. Lol. I was so happy to discover a story I hadn’t experienced before.
Alice Hoffman has a way of pulling you into the story. Her writing is poetic and layered, yet warm, making every time I read her books feel like coming home. Even in an ordinary tale, without any magic, it still feels magical to read. I truly love her books.
The Bookstore Family really got to me. Paris is painted so vividly I could almost see it, hear it, even smell it. And the island where the family lives feels so real and cozy. The characters feel alive, like people I care about. Hoffman shows love and sorrow side by side in the most honest way.
Some lines stayed with me: Every time a book is reread it’s entirely different depending on who the reader has become. And Death wasn’t a foreign country ; it was the country we all walked past each and every day.
This novella is moving, beautiful, and I loved every page. I really recommend it if you enjoy heartfelt, thoughtful stories.
Huge thanks to Amazon Original Stories for letting me dive into this book and share my thoughts. I really appreciate it. And just so it is clear, all the opinions, feels, and occasional ramblings are entirely my own.
Five years have gone by since the last installment .
Violet is now a pastry chef at a renowned restaurant in Paris. She lives in a small apartment, is alone and thinks it's better that way, has no friends not even among their colleagues and is still grieving the father she never known.
She went home once for her cousin Suzy's first birthday and her mother visited her one time. She hasn't been home in 4 years, because she fears she won't be able to leave again and that it will be considered a failure. So her aunt Isabel comes to visit for a week. She can see Violet is not happy, that she is lost, looking for something, not knowing exactly what she's missing. She thinks she needs to start reading again and the day she returns home she leaves her a book Violet used to love as a child with a note saying "Books are always what we need. Don't forget to look for magic."
Every day before work she goes to Rosie's Bakery for a coffee but especially for the delicious treats they sell. She picks up the book and can't seem to stop reading even when drinking the coffee. While there a man, Remy, asks permission to seat and if she likes children's books as he does. The answer is yes and they connet instantely as if they knew each other for a long time! The next day she hopes to see him again and when she's leaving for work the kitchen door is open and she finds out he's the bakery Patissier.
Not long after that she receives a call from David, her mother 's husband, asking her to come home fast because Sophie is very ill again and this time she will not recover. She quits her job and leaves a message for Remy to know what happened .
Her mother is dying and has lists for what she still wants to do and for everyone else, so when she''s gone they have something to focus on besides their grief, their mourning and their broken hearts! Its a sad time but also one to remember the good moments they had as a family!
And there's also the letters between Violet and Remy and the postcards he keeps sending, that only reaches her hands before everybody in town has already read them.
Violet asks him if he wouldn't mind living in an island again, he was raised in one, and one week after the funeral he arrives in town.
And together, with her grandmother's and his grandmother's recipes, they reopen the bakery in the Bookstore with the most delicious cookies and cakes the island has ever seen!!
As all the females in this family have done, Violet chases her dream - all the way to Paris. It is what she learns there that brings her home and helps her understand love. Although not always in a happy way, this fourth novella in the Once Upon a Time Bookshop series ties up everyone's life - back on the Island, in the book store, where it began.
Of course this mini-series was well worth the read - it is authored by Alice Hoffman, who always champions the female in her stories.
This kindle ebook novella is from my Kindle Unlimited account book four of four
She is running a bookstore on the island. She goes to France to visit her daughter. Then a phone call about her sister. Back to the island where her sister has returned to. Her sister is dying of cancer and they enjoy the moments. 😏
I would recommend this series and author to readers of romantic family and friends relationships adventures novels 😘😊 2025 🤗😉
The perfect ending to a heartwarming series. I have thoroughly enjoyed the adventures of Sophie, Isabel, Violet, Johnny, and others. In the end grief happens, but love is always there if you are willing to give it a chance.
My favorite of the entire series. I wanted to hear more....about the recipes, the cookbook, and more. I loved this line "Every time a book is re-read it's entirely different based on who the reader has become." Great end to this series.
"Once upon a time I lived in a bookstore, I looked out the window and couldn’t see the beauty of the place, I couldn’t see it until I described it to you."
*User can't write a review because she's too busy crying 😭*
My Rating: 4⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Great short story and second book in this short story series!!
This is the last book in a series of Amazon Original short stories called the Once Upon a Time Bookshop Stories. These books are only around 40 pages each so really take no time at all to read.
They are about love and loss and finding what you lost once again. Two sisters Isabel and Sophie have been the main characters and they are both so different and so loveable in their own way. This book focuses on Sophie’s now grown up daughter Violet, who is living in Paris, she is supposed to be happy and avoiding love in a city that is full of it… however, despite her best efforts she is craving just that, and homesick in the midsts.
These short stories are quite sad but always have an uplifting story throughout.
This author wrote another short story I loved (What my Mother Taught Me) and so I have come back for more and I love her style. It is blunt and full of emotion, it’s just different and a real change of pace.
I have read all these little beauties highly recommend even if they don’t usually sound like your cup of tea.. it’s only short so why not!!
The Bookstore Family was the best book in the series following the daughter of one the main characters in the first three books.
Violet has spent most of her life helping others realize their dreams but leaving Maine five years ago to attend culinary school in Paris was the first time Violet did something truly for herself. But despite living her dream, Violet feels like she's missing something. After her aunt Isabel urges her to keep looking, Violet thinks she's finally figured it out just as a family tragedy calls her home.
The Bookstore Family was definitely my favorite of the books in the series although I didn't fully love it either. Alice Hoffman's writing style continues to not work for me in this one with the weird sentence structure and being overall a very uneven story. At this point I don't see myself picking anything else up from her in the future because of these issues.
Violet's story was a lot more interesting to me than Isabel and Sophie's so I was looking forward to seeing how it played out when I picked this book up. This book has a bit more of a romance in it than the others although it's still primarily a story about family. The romance is a bit of an instalove situation although it does develop beyond that somewhat when Violet and her beau exchange letters after she returns to Maine. This book deals heavily with grief much like The Bookstore Keepers did and really the series overall has felt like that was the focus. I did think the ending was a bit unrealistic but I'm willing to look past that.
Overall The Bookstore Family was an enjoyable read but I don't think I will be picking anything else up from this author in the future.
This was my first Alice Hoffman book in many years. It felt like it had all the elements of a lovely story but they were all crammed in super tight, with way too much removed. This was not a good plot for a novella, hence the 3 stars. There was a lot that was lovely about the writing and the details. I enjoyed the beautiful settings, the relationships and the characters but just felt short shrift by how rushed it all was.
My tears couldn't take it anymore. This book made me miss my grandpa so much. He went through the same thing as Sophie and it's hard going through that grief in life and in paper.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
The short stories in this series are fantastic palate cleansers in between heavy reads. While dealing with serious issues such as illness and death of a loved one, the soft, wholesome, and sweet storyline prevails. If this is the final installment, it has been a satisfying read.