Jacqueline Knight prioritises her busy work life, often traveling and working late. Jacq uses her job to provide for her son, and to avoid the gaps in her home life. Her father is ageing, however, and needs more assistance and Jacq is going to have to find a way to make that happen.
Jacq’s ex, Casey Meadows, is busy with her own photography business, and with the occasional visits from their adult son. The safety of having separate lives starts to erode when both Jacq and Casey are needed to help Jacq’s father, and both have to face the issues that drove them apart eight years ago.
Jacq and Casey are quite well written characters, and there is a good sense of what attracted them in the first place, and also what drove them apart. The book starts with the catalyst of change, Jacq’s father becoming frailer and needing more assistance, and this storyline is well considered and something to which most people in their 40s can relate.
The book took a little while to warm up, as Jacq felt a little cold at the start, and this distance also left the character a little distanced from the reader. About a third of the way through the book, there was a change as more of Casey became apparent, and Jacq warmed up. That’s where the more recent changes in the characters became apparent and the book became more interesting for me.
The pacing was a little slow to start, but ticked along nicely once it got going, and the characters became more complex. The ancillary characters, the father, and the son, were less well written and I never really got a good sense of them, but perhaps that wasn’t really necessary in this romance between the two main characters.
I liked that the book dealt with the re-combustion of a relationship rather than the combustion of a new relationship. Dutton managed that well, and there was definite heat there, which was appropriate. The book really focuses on the relationship between the two main characters, with their flaws, as well as the possibilities of the new version of it, and that worked really well.
Advanced reading copy provided by NetGalley for an honest review.