This novella, James’ debut, is about Nicola and Grace, boss and secretary respectively, who have to gon on a trip together for work during Christmas. The thing is, both of them have feelings for each other. It’s a heartwarming sapphic romantic comedy with a Christmas setting, the kind of thing you’d want to find on Netflix by the beginning of December: it’s cute and entertaining, as well as having well-constructed characters, especially Nicola.
The process of reading this book, at least for me, was fast. I read it in less than a day, it truly felt like binge-watching a Netflix show (I’m dropping hints that I’d absolutely watch a cinematic adaptation of this book made by Netflix, did y’all notice?). It was fast, but not rushed, though, so kudos to James for nailing the pacing!
I really enjoyed that their attraction to women wasn’t a problem in the narrative. Their problems were unrelated to their sexualities and it feels good to read something that isn’t focused on the overwhelming experience of LGBTphobia for once. However, I think it could’ve been talked about more. The story is in a modern setting, meaning that labels and the experience of LGBTphobia exist and while it doesn’t need to be the focus of the narrative, a brief mention could happen. There could be a mention of their ‘out status’: is Grace out to her family? What about at work? They could’ve talked about their previous relationships, too (the part where they talk about the space Grace takes in the bed and she implies that she’d slept with someone next to her at some point, would be a good introduction to the subject).
Besides, seeing the ‘lesbian’ label used casually in a novella as lighthearted as this one would be meaningful and it’d help normalize it, as it’s usually seen as inherently sexual. It’s only mentioned once near the end of the story, by Grace, and I would’ve liked to see it more often in the narrative. Finally, a detail I appreciated was the fact that it’s mentioned that Nicola started therapy by the end of the book. It’s a fairly popular trope to imply that romantic love can heal everything, even mental illnesses, which is... not the case. And that detail being a part of the story actually touched me, since it’s not a recurring theme.
If you want a cute and quick Christmas sapphic romance that has a happy ending, then you should get ‘Make the Yuletide Gay’. The plot isn’t complex, there are enough Christmassy situations to set up the mood and enough fanfiction tropes to get you emotionally invested.