This is book eight in the Blue Moon Bay series and the main characters are Anna Bell and Peter Locke. Anna returned back to her home town after the sudden death of her father and finds the mini-mart that was his dream, failing and heavily in debt. Her mother and brother have been trying their best to find an investor or some other way to pay off the debts, but even Anna helping out with no pay, hasn’t really helped. It seems more likely that their mother will have to sell the mini-mart and lose everything their father had worked for. Her friends mention a new face in town, Peter Locke, who is a billionaire, who is buying up loads of properties around and outside of town. When she spots his name on the papers her mother is thinking of signing, she realises that he is the person wanting to buy their family legacy and modernise it, rather than keep traditions going. Anna believes people come to Blue Moon Bay for the lovely traditions and traditional shops they have. This is her first ever Christmas without her father and a hard time for them all, especially when their father was the one who loved this time of year and putting up all the decorations.
When she and a friend go to the Christmas tree lighting ceremony in the town centre, Peter is pointed out to her and she decides to catch him and try to push tradition over modernisation, but without letting him know who she actually is. Peter lost his father about a year previously and saw the effects of his overworking lifestyle and wishes to change his own life, so he doesn’t follow the early death of his own father. He used to visit the town as a child with his parents and had always loved it. He is taken with the Blue Moon Bay folklore of kissing under a blue moon, by the plaque on the beach, by the inn. He has changed up the Christmas decorations, changing her father’s golden bells to inflatable Santa’s. She hates it at first glance, but soon sees the absolute delight of all the children during the lighting ceremony and parade and has to admit they were a good choice.
Peter is enthusiastic about all his new ideas and what he wants to do for the town. He sees it as needing lots of modernisation to pull in more tourists during the whole year, rather than mostly all in the summer. Anna is determined to show him all the traditional parts of the town and what makes it so delightful, but soon finds that other businesses are also struggling. They have a connection and Peter invites her for dinner, she thinks she can use this attraction to get him to change his mind about her father’s life’s work, but this could soon all crash down upon her head, as she keeps her identity secret and what her main interest in speaking to him was! It could all backfire and break apart a romance that even she is beginning to believe in. Their lives may be vastly different on economic fronts, but they have suffered the same loss recently and there is more that connects them than separates them. A gentle storyline with a romance that comes about from opposing opinions, but draws them closer, until the secret is out. What happens next is for readers to find out, to hope for Christmas values and magic to play a part, or for common sense and truth to prevail. Another fascinating pairing in this series, with characters you will know from previous books if you have read them, but it isn’t necessary. I received an ARC copy of this book and I have freely given my own opinion of the book above.