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The Good Parts: A Novel

Not yet published
Expected 28 Jul 26

Win a free print copy of this book!

20 days and 01:48:58

15 copies available
U.S. only
Rate this book
She erased their past. He’s betting on their future.
 
When Landon receives a letter from Rose—the woman he once planned forever with—he learns their love story is over. She’s undergone a radical memory-erasing treatment, leaving behind her grief, her past... and him. But Landon can't bear to lose the love of his life. If she fell for him once, couldn’t she fall for him again?
 
Now living in Edinburgh, Rose's world is a blank canvas, and she's dating someone new. When Landon reenters her life as a stranger, they become fast friends, their lives entwining once more. But what Rose doesn’t know is that this new friend carries the weight of everything they once their firsts, their marriage, and the heartbreak they barely survived. And when she starts exhibiting strange symptoms, it becomes clear their history isn’t gone—it’s just buried. And remembering could come at a devastating cost.
 
Told in alternating timelines—his from the present, hers from the past—The Good Parts is an achingly poignant story about the people we become across a lifetime, and the quiet grace of learning to let go while holding on to what’s worth keeping.
 

352 pages, Kindle Edition

Expected publication July 28, 2026

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About the author

Evann Normandin

5 books30 followers

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 89 reviews
Profile Image for ambersometimesreads.
327 reviews605 followers
April 8, 2026
getting hit by a truck would've hurt me less than this book 😃 how am I supposed to cope with that outcome??

this is a book that's going to stick with me forever. this has the perfect balance of romance and devastation and consider me DEVASTATED. this follows landon and rose in a world where a memory erasing pill exists. it doesn't just erase a moment/moments but your whole entire life and essentially makes you a completely different person, just with the same face and body. this book reminded me of the severance tv show because they refer to their old self as their 'other.'

rose experiences something horrible and decides to take the pill without even writing a letter to her husband landon. she completely forgets him but since he didn't take the pill, he still remembers her. he can't live without her so he goes in search of "her" and starts to hang out with the new version of her. this book was such a good mix of magical realism/scj-fi/romance and really had me thinking about how horrible it would be to be landon in this situation but then also getting glimpses into why rose felt it was the only right choice.

thank you to grand central publishing for sending me this ARC, it's the best feeling for an ARC to be 5 stars ⭐️
Profile Image for Melissa Horrigan.
48 reviews1 follower
January 11, 2026
I want to thank NetGalley and Grand Central for allowing me the utmost privilege to read The Good Parts.

This may have been one of the best books I have ever read. I loved the story, the concept, but most of all I love Rose and Landon. This book broke me, I cried at so many chapters, especially nearing the end. Understanding why we got to where we were, but I also, surprisingly, thought it ended perfectly.

The writing is so well done that you can’t help but find yourself there watching the story unfold. I love the way the story is from Rose in the past and Landon in the present. It shows you the story in such a way that keeps you involved and hanging on for each chapter and then for the next to finish the one before.

I would pay to see this book turned into movie or limited series, played exactly as the author intended with the back and forth.

I cannot praise this book more, I hope everyone reads it and loves it and feels as broken as I do now.

Thank you again for allowing me an early release of this amazing book.
Profile Image for Amy.
Author 1 book334 followers
October 27, 2025
The Good Parts is an exquisite exploration of memory, grief, the choices we make, and the ways we love. The fantastical premise drew me in, and the cozy backdrop of Edinburgh made me want to stay. Normandin's characters navigated the moral and ethical dilemmas she posed in such a way that, despite the surreal elements, made the narrative feel entirely true. For a book about forgetting, The Good Parts will not let you go, and will keep you thinking about the world she has built long after you've finished reading.
Profile Image for Cathy.
191 reviews
April 26, 2026
5 ⭐️ Wow this was an emotional roller coaster. Rose and Landon’s love story was interrupted by her decision to take a memory loss pill and start over. Landon grapples with the why and if it’s possible to get his true love back.
I loved the way the book jumped in time between their first meeting and present day. I was completely immersed in this one and loved the character development throughout. It broke my heart and picked up the pieces repeatedly.
Thank you NetGalley and publishers for the early copy!
Profile Image for han.
6 reviews
March 12, 2026
The Good Parts uses magical realism in a similar way to Rachel Serle. Using a magical element that drives the plot leaving you sobbing at 1am questioning life and the genius author behind such a whimsical, grief driven story. Thank you to Net Galley for allowing me to read this amazing debut novel!

I would also like to add that Coming Up Roses by Harry Styles is literally this book.
Profile Image for Lex Arsenault.
345 reviews8 followers
April 21, 2026
Wow did this book fuck me up. Full ARC review to come..

The Good Parts left me pretty devastated at the end, a sign that Normandin's story hit me so emotionally that it will stay with me for a while.

In a world where a memory-erasing pill exists, Rose takes one following a devastating tragedy and her new "other" moves to Edinburgh to start anew (literally; the story gave me some Severance vibes because the pill not only erases your memory but your whole self, leaving your body with a fresh, blank slate). Meanwhile, her ex-husband Landon is cluelessly left behind and desperately still in love with Rose. In an attempt to get "Rose" back, and despite their best friends advice, Landon, too, travels to Edinburgh to see if he can get the other Rose to fall back in love with him. In a dual timeline, Rose takes us through her relationship with Landon from its inception at an unnamed college in Vermont through her decision to take the pill.

Normandin intricately explores grief and memory with just enough surrealism to make the story feel true. Rose and Landon's journey of deep love and loss and what it takes to find ourselves will leave you wondering what you would do if you found yourself in a similar situation.

EVERYONE needs to read this book!!!!!!!! Thank you to NetGalley to the publisher for this ARC (and broken heart) for an honest review.
Profile Image for Carrie Mercer.
9 reviews
April 27, 2026
4.75 ⭐️
Thank you to NetGalley and Hachette Book Group for my advanced copy of this genre-bending love story.

Would you take a pill to forget your life and start over again? What if the person you love took the pill and forgot you? These are the deeply emotional and thought-provoking questions at the heart of this story, one that examines love, friendship, grief, and forgiveness in ways that will stay with you long after the last page.

This is a perfect book club pick. You feel deeply for the two main characters, even when you don’t always agree with their decisions. The love in this story is the kind you can almost feel pouring off the page. And because of where the book begins, you know tragedy is ahead, yet you simply have to know how their story ends.

This isn’t a romance. It has love, moments of joy, and genuine humor, but at its core it’s a stark and unflinching look at relationships and the ways life can throw you curve balls you may never fully recover from. A brilliant debut from Evann Normandin. Highly recommend.
Profile Image for Hannah Stob.
358 reviews222 followers
May 10, 2026
I’m really conflicted on how to rate this book…I think I’ll stick with 4 but in some ways, it’s a solid 3.

On one hand, I loved the premise and set up of the book; her story line in the past, watching their love story unfold and his in the present.

But on the other hand, I’m wholly unsatisfied. I won’t go into details because I don’t want to ruin the story for anyone but I am not conflicted by the ending. While I completely understand the choice of that ending, I would have liked it to go the other way.

I think that many will love this book and it would be a great book club pick, a lot of good conversations would come from it!

Definitely thought provoking and an engaging read! Thank you Netgalley for the ARC!
Profile Image for Ash.
167 reviews
April 7, 2026
Perfection.

Rose, Landon, Poppy and Conor: felt like I was their personal friend in this beautiful and heartbreaking story of friendship, grief and eternal love. This story was so beautifully and eloquently written and I felt so connected to each of the characters.

I don’t think I will ever get over this book. Beginning was so moving and beautiful and ending was the same. Wouldn’t change a thing.

Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind is coming up very soon on my rewatch list bc this shattered me the same way.

Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for the advance copy in exchange for an honest review ✨📖💛
Profile Image for Natalie Wilson.
3 reviews
Review of advance copy received from Goodreads Giveaways
January 30, 2026
I am so honored to have received an ARC copy of this book as part of a Goodreads Giveaway.

To say this book was devastatingly beautiful is beyond an understatement. It has been a while since I have read a book that made me cry and sit in thoughtful silence for longer than I would like to admit.

If you are thinking of picking up this book, for the love of all that is holy, please do so. The entire journey of an incredible love, profound loss, and finding while simultaneously losing oneself is written with such care, precision, and truth, that the reader is left wondering what they would do if they found themselves in a similar situation.

If you could forget it all, would you? Would you choose to forget everything, or would you want to remember the good parts?

I know one thing is for certain, I will forever and always treasure The Good Parts.
1 review
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 27, 2026
The Good Parts took me on a journey I won’t soon forget. The raw emotion woven through this story is stunning - love, grief, hope, and the ever-present question of how far one would go in the pursuit of happiness. I found myself deeply attached to every character, each of them feeling fully realized and essential to the story.

The portrayal of true friendship through Conor, Poppy, and even Dave, adds a beautiful layer of humanity and warmth to Rose and Landon’s lives. Their loyalty and presence ground the story in moments of light amid its darker times.

This novel masterfully blends comforting settings with dystopian undertones and the stark realities of a harsh world, creating an atmosphere that is both immersive and gripping. Rose and Landon’s love story is powerful, tender, and unforgettable, one that lingered with me long after I turned the final page.
Profile Image for Ariana.
253 reviews258 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
April 1, 2026
[ARC gifted from Grand Central Publishing]

I finished this book in three days and had to give myself a night of sleep to process it all because my mind was actually blown.. in the all the good ways for an emotional reader. The Good Parts made me feel everything. Initially I was excited and filled with promise, in between I was eager with thoughts of devastation and anger, and in the end I understood. The author managed to create an element of ease paired with inevitable heartbreak and made me cry… which I believe to be essential from time to time (don’t blame me, I’m a cancer sun and pisces rising).

Memory is a focal theme of the plot that I found beautiful and profound, the experience of when the mind fades the body remembers. Do we ever truly forget? When do we begin suppressing? Will precedent events always seep familiarity in the chapters of lives we live? How do we truly move forward? The questions, the thoughts, the multifaceted aspects to it all.

This story and the characters will follow me for a while.
Profile Image for Samaria.
7 reviews
May 2, 2026
The Good Parts follows Rose and Landon, a married couple in a world where you can take a pill that erases your entire past. After something devastating, Rose chooses to leave her old life behind. Landon, who still remembers everything, can’t let her go and reenters her life as a stranger, hoping they might somehow find their way back to each other.

this book really stayed with me. I’m convinced it’s probably going to be my best read of the year.

it’s one of those stories that makes you pause and think about what you would do in that situation. there are so many small, quiet moments that feel real, and I kept putting myself in both of their places.

it’s deeply about grief, letting go, and trying to understand who you are when everything you knew about your life is gone. I found myself understanding Rose, even when it hurt to, and at the same time feeling how heavy everything was from Landon’s side.

the writing felt poetic. I wanted to highlight every line.
I was not okay after this one but I loved it so much.

thank you NetGalley and Grand Central Publishing for the ARC.

5 stars.
Profile Image for Amber.
248 reviews4 followers
April 30, 2026
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️- “Breautiful”

Brutal and beautiful ♥️ This book absolutely wrecked me, and I knew it would. I kept putting off reading it because I had a feeling it would break my heart… and wow, was I right.

Despite the cover vibes, this is NOT a rom-com, so do not be fooled. Yes, there’s romance, moments of joy, genuine humor, and even a little magical realism/sci-fi with the memory-erasing pill concept, but at its core, this is a raw and unflinching look at love, grief, relationships, and the ways life can throw curveballs you may never fully recover from.

I loved the dual timeline and dual POV- Rose telling the past and Landon navigating the present made the storytelling feel so layered and emotional. The love in this book isn’t just romantic either; it’s deeply rooted in friendship and connection. Conor and Poppy deserve a special shoutout because that kind of lifelong friendship is something everyone hopes to find.

Oh, my heart. Tears. All of them. Not even kidding a little bit when I say I closed the book and stared at the wall for a bit to disassociate. This was devastating in the best way and such a brilliant debut from Evann Normandin. If you’re dealing with grief, proceed with caution- but wow, what a beautiful book.
Profile Image for Shelby Comstock.
5 reviews
April 19, 2026
I liked this but I’m torn because Rose started becoming unlikeable to me throughout. I can feel for her grief but it makes me think of the saying “is it better to have loved and lost than never to loved at all”. Is erasing all that grief worth forgetting the good parts?
Profile Image for Brittany .
24 reviews6 followers
May 4, 2026
Thank you Netgalley for the arc copy!!

Yea so….. that WRECKED ME. But 6 stars.
This is my favorite type of book, the real life moments, the imperfections of a REAL relationship. The grief, trying but failing to salvage something. THATS REAL. This is real life. This makes every reader ask themselves what they would do if they were put in rose AND Landon’s situation … and it’s a TOUGH choice.
This is the definition of when you love something let them go. IT HURT SO GOOD.
I cried like a baby.

Loved every minute.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for liz.
69 reviews
May 9, 2026
Wow, what a fabulously written story about love, loss and friendship. Normandin’s writing had me hooked from the first chapter. The way she mirrored Rose and Landon’s story from past and present timelines was truly beautiful.
Profile Image for Kalyani.
589 reviews120 followers
Read
April 5, 2026
ended up skimming this but truly do not read this if you are in an emotionally vulnerable moment in life!! this is a message for your own good !! Even skimming it made me want to bawl
Profile Image for Pascaline.
131 reviews
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
April 30, 2026
After taking a pill erasing her memories, Rose leaves behind her life and her great love, Landon, and he follows her hoping she’ll fall for him again. WOW, I loved this. The premise is compelling and makes you wonder if you’d take such a pill, and I really enjoyed the dual timeline between the present and their past, slowly revealing why Rose made her choice. The characters, both main and secondary, are lovable, and the story is beautiful, emotional, and at times heartbreaking. The ending isn’t necessarily happy, but it feels right. A truly memorable read that I’d highly recommend.
Thank you to NetGalley and Grand Central publishing for the ARC.
208 reviews16 followers
Read
February 2, 2026
This debut novel reminded me of a satisfactory mashup of One Day and Time Traveller’s Wife, delivering big emotions in an interesting narrative structure that also posed evocative questions about love and memory. Good stuff.
Profile Image for Syd Sheldon.
27 reviews4 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
April 17, 2026
I adored the entire premise of this book. Of course I wanted to read initially for the speculative memory-erasing treatment feature. I am not usually a romance reader, but thought I’d try it out anyway. The way this love endures through so many monumental phases of life was nothing short of incredible. Not going to lie, my heart was shattered by the end and I ugly cried a few times more than I would have liked. Will be healing from this one for a while.
Profile Image for Dawn.
97 reviews3 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
May 6, 2026
If you've read any of my other reviews, you'll know that speculative fiction (especially stories that deal with memory or alternate histories) is one of my absolute favorite tropes. Novels like Once and Again by Rebecca Serle, Maybe in Another Life by Taylor Jenkins Reid, or Tell Me an Ending by Jo Harkin hook me on the premise alone. Some of these love stories ask whether two people are meant to find each other and explore the circumstances around what happens if one or two things change. The Good Parts asks the more devastating question: what happens when one of them chooses to forget they ever did?

Evann Normandin’s The Good Parts is a deeply emotional, speculative love story about Rose and Landon, a couple whose relationship begins with the bright, ordinary magic of college friendship and grows into the kind of life-altering love that feels impossible to untangle from identity itself. But when a life-shattering loss leaves Rose unable to keep living inside her own memories, she takes a pill that erases her past completely. Not just the pain. Not just the trauma. Everything. Her marriage, her friendships, her history, and the version of herself shaped by all of it.

Landon, however, remembers everything.

The novel unfolds across two timelines: Rose’s past, where we see the love story build, and Landon’s present, where he follows the new Rose to Edinburgh, desperate to understand whether the person he loved still exists somewhere inside this blank-slate version of her. That structure works beautifully because it lets the reader fall in love with them while also watching the aftermath of that love’s destruction. I felt like I was constantly holding two emotional truths at once: I understood why Landon could not let go, and I understood why Rose believed forgetting was the only way to survive.

What makes the book so effective is that it does not treat memory as a simple container for pain. It asks whether our worst experiences can be separated from our best ones, and whether losing grief also means losing love. The speculative premise gives the story a slightly surreal edge, but the emotions are painfully grounded. This is not just a romance, though the love story is central. It is also about trauma, friendship, parenthood, guilt, forgiveness, and the frightening possibility of becoming someone new because staying who you are hurts too much.

The supporting relationships add a lot of warmth, especially through the friendships surrounding Rose and Landon. Those characters give the story texture and relief, reminding us that grief does not happen in isolation. People witness it, misunderstand it, carry pieces of it, and sometimes love us through it even when they cannot fix us.

It also hints at and dances around the ultimate question of whether we are a collection of our past experiences and memories. If, by erasing our past, we are in essence erasing the very things that make up who we are as individuals. Multiple times throughout the book, Rose refers to herself before taking the pill as a different person, a separate person from herself that she doesn't know or understand.

I loved this book. The writing is tender without feeling overly polished, and the dual timeline kept me emotionally invested from start to finish. I especially appreciated how the book lets both Rose and Landon be flawed. Landon’s devotion is moving, but it is also complicated. Rose’s decision is heartbreaking, but the book provides enough emotional context that I could not reduce it to a single judgment.

My only hesitation is that some readers may struggle with Rose’s choices, especially if they come in expecting a more traditional romance arc. This is not a light, tidy love story. It is painful, morally messy, and at times emotionally heavy. You may hate Rose and her decisions; they may not be the ones you would have made in her situation, but thankfully, you are not presented with her choices. And, hey, the book got you thinking about it, and that's a win. Life is not easy. It's messy, and it's that messiness that made it feel honest.

The question at the center of the novel stayed with me like a line I could not stop underlining: If you could erase the worst parts of your life, would you also be willing to lose the best ones?

Read this if you like: emotional speculative fiction, love stories with moral complexity, dual timelines, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, The Time Traveler’s Wife, Rebecca Serle, Jojo Moyes, or Taylor Jenkins Reid-style relationship stories with a heavy emotional core.

Thank you, Grand Central Publishing (@GrandCentralpub) and NetGalley, for this advanced reader copy (ARC) in exchange for my unbiased review. It was my favorite read in April. If you love this type of book, look for it at your favorite book seller in July 2026.
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐(5 stars)
Profile Image for Alyson.
378 reviews3 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
April 6, 2026
This book makes heartbreak feel like the rainbow after a storm… despite all the devastation that precedes it, something beautiful remains. It is a story about love, about friendship, and about grief. It is a bittersweet reminder that life is full of contrasting moments, the good parts and bad parts, and it's impossible to truly appreciate either side of the pendulum without experiencing them both.

The premise of this story is unique, and it immediately sparked my interest. If there was a pill that would allow you to forget everything that happened up to that point in your life, would you take it? If you do take it, you don’t lose the knowledge of how to perform day to day functions, but you would no longer remember the people you’ve known or the experiences you’ve had. Think of it like returning to factory settings, but for humans. With just one dose of a medication, you can erase past traumas and get a do over on attaining a life full of happiness and contentment.

The two main characters, Langdon and Rose meet in college, and they become that couple that is almost too good to be true, the kind of relationship that you only read about in books or see in movies. At the beginning of the novel, the reader learns that Rose has taken the forgetting pill, and Langdon is on a mission to make her remember him, figuring that if she fell in love with him once, surely he can make it happen again. This book is told in a dual timeline, alternating between present day and the past from when Langdon and Rose first meet. Not only does the author weave the two timelines together artistically and cohesively, but she also see-saws between their two POVs with Rose giving voice to the events of the past, and Langdon narrating the present. This is highly effective, because it allows the reader full access into the minds of both of these characters, making you feel that you truly know them and understand why they do the things that they do.

This is a book full of tiny relatable moments, snapshots of all different types of relationships (romantic partner, parent, child, friend, random person on a plane, and more) that leave you contemplating what you would do if you were in similar situations. As the story progresses, those feelings of reflection and sentimentality grow until you are so emotionally invested, you find yourself yearning for these characters and their happiness. The characters are beautifully flawed, and they make you love them and make you angry at them in equal measure.

Overall, this is a haunting and evocative novel that leaves you returning to its characters even after you have read the last words of their story. Evann Normandine is a debut author, but she has secured herself a fan in me. I can’t wait to read the next batch of words that flow from her fingers. Add this to your TBR if you enjoy books by authors such as Sally Rooney or Jojo Moyes.

A big thank you to NetGalley, Grand Central Publishing, and Evann Normandin for an advance digital copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Tamara.
106 reviews3 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
April 10, 2026
The Good Parts by Evann Normandin is the debut novel by this author. It’s labelled as a romance and for the most part I agree with that categorization. This book follows Rose and Landon, apparent soul mates who when we are introduced to them their marriage is coming to an end. There are magical realism elements to this novel, in that Rose has taken a new scientific pill that makes you forget. When we are introduced to Rose she is already left Landon and took the pill without his knowing. From this point Landon is determined to find her and make her fall in love with him again.

The novel toggles between current and past storytelling with the chapters in the past are from Rose’s POV and the current timeline being from Landon’s. He discovers that Rose has moved to Scotland and he gets on a plane to save his marriage and reconnect with her.

When he sees Rose again, she is so light and carefree. They’re college sweethearts and Landon have known her for many years and is shocked by this new Rose. She’s daring and spontaneous and to me- really selfish. Landon is so in love with this woman, so he doesn’t have a dreadful thing to say about her and maybe it’s because the current storyline he’s trying to reconnect. And maybe also because he’s very nostalgic and tends to gloss over the bad things about himself and others.
This theme of selfishness continues for Rose, even when the story follows her thoughts and reflections. She seems to be a selfish friend and wife and although, as a couple they suffered a great loss, she’s selfish again when she chooses to leave without even speaking to him. They never go to grief counseling, the baby dies, she takes the pill and then poof, she’s gone. Then when she does remember him at the end of the story and they seem to resolve there main issue- the loss and guilt of losing their daughter and the unintended blame each impose on themselves- she takes another pill to forget him, her best friend and her ultimate goal- her daughter. Landon was not completely innocent in the dissolution of their marriage, but the main theme of this novel is he has to pull her along for each part and their relationship seemed very one-sided to me.

I feel that this book was more of a general fiction, with romantic thematic elements. The heroine is completely unlikable, even though no one sees her that way- except maybe the reader. Overall, though, I enjoyed this story and the writing was beautiful. Thank you, Grand Central Publishing, and NetGalley for this e-ARC in exchange for an honest review.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Kristi Lamont.
2,291 reviews77 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
April 30, 2026
BOOK REPORT
Received a complimentary copy of The Good Parts, by Evann Normandin, from Grand Central Publishing/NetGalley, for which I am appreciative, in exchange for a fair and honest review. Scroll past the BOOK REPORT section for a cut-and-paste of the DESCRIPTION of it from them if you want to read my thoughts on the book in the context of that summary.

⭐ 2.5 ⭐

Meh.

But, really, I guess I’m just as much “meh” as I found this book to be. Nothing new under the sun, especially if one is A Lady Of A Certain Age who has read/watched as much fiction as have I.

I’m pretty sure I’ll be an outlier on this one. [This is my shocked face.] It wasn’t bad, but it wasn’t good enough that I remembered early this afternoon that I’d started reading it before falling asleep last night. And I almost didn’t bother finishing it, seeing as I how I was predicting (correctly) lots of stuff, including the ending, because I could see it all coming from a mile off.

So, yeah, derivative, me and it.

PS
What is it with nosebleeds in fiction these days? Why are they at the forefront of the zeitgeist?

DESCRIPTION
She erased their past. He’s betting on their future.


When Landon receives a letter from Rose—the woman he once planned forever with—he learns their love story is over. She’s undergone a radical memory-erasing treatment, leaving behind her grief, her past... and him. But Landon can't bear to lose the love of his life. If she fell for him once, couldn’t she fall for him again?

Now living in Edinburgh, Rose's world is a blank canvas, and she's dating someone new. When Landon reenters her life as a stranger, they become fast friends, their lives entwining once more. But what Rose doesn’t know is that this new friend carries the weight of everything they once shared: their firsts, their marriage, and the heartbreak they barely survived. And when she starts exhibiting strange symptoms, it becomes clear their history isn’t gone—it’s just buried. And remembering could come at a devastating cost.

Told in alternating timelines—his from the present, hers from the past—The Good Parts is an achingly poignant story about the people we become across a lifetime, and the quiet grace of learning to let go while holding on to what’s worth keeping.


Profile Image for Morgan R.
7 reviews
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
April 1, 2026
The Good Parts is a study of memory, grief, love, and the choices we make in the wake of trauma. TGP is told in a dual timeline wherein Landon’s chapters are in the present and Rose’s chapters are in the past. Throughout the book, the timelines slowly inch towards converging in a way that has you excited for it and dreading it all at the same time.

Rose and Landon are a case study in finding yourself within one another and branching out to find yourself in the world—and even concurrent to one another. Normandin explores the desire to remake yourself into something you find worthy, as well as the more existential questions: what type of love is enough? Perhaps love for a partner that withstands challenges? Or perhaps it’s the love of a child? Normandin takes extra care in exploring self-discovery, familial trauma, traumatic birth, postpartum depression, and refining what it means to love after loss.

A particularly interesting thread for me is the ethical dilemma of forgetting—not just a personal release but a medically induced loss of memory. Is the freedom worth the cost of who you are at your core? Is being the New You worth a permanent ego death of who you were? Outside of what was explored in the book, I wondered could we truly write down the good parts of our own stories when our world is moving away from the skill of remembering and into the skill of documenting. Will you remember the sparkling first laugh of your child? Or do you have to document it on video? If we are losing the skill of remembering the good parts, can we truly notate everything we had to love in our life? Real existential stuff. She got me there.

It’s the most beautiful thing I’ve read in a good long while. I am not one to annotate books or make highlights in the things I read, but I found myself highlighting at least one thing in every chapter. I am unable to share quotes from an ARC, but I could see myself needing to make a separate post for the most memorable parts once it comes out. This book demands to be remembered and perhaps documenting the quotes is the best way I know how. (No, genuinely, this book hasn’t left my mind since I finished it. I’ll remember the old fashioned way, too.)

Thanks GCP for the ARC!
Profile Image for Kayla.
13 reviews
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
April 8, 2026
I sat my e-reader down after the first chapter, picked up my phone and texted my bookish best friend, “I can already tell this book is going to wreck me.” I was right. 6 stars.

When I finished the book and read the “about the author” I read the sentence “The Good Parts is her debut” and nearly floated away into the abyss with shock. This book was a masterclass in prose.

We’ve all joked that we “wished there was a pill that could erase our brains so we could read a book for the first time again…” and hilariously enough that joke slaps you in the face TWICE when it comes to this book. Our FMC has decided to take a pill that will make her forget everything of her past and start anew. The book is told in alternating timelines and alternating POV’s, with our FMC giving us the past, leading up to the moment she took the pill, and our MMC giving us the present day, the moment she took the pill and his mission to make her fall in love with him, because if he did it once, he could do it again…

Alternating timelines mixed with alternating POVs sounds messy but this was done masterfully. Really and truly one of the most beautiful books I’ve ever had the pleasure to read (and, early at that - thank you Grand Central and NetGalley). It felt criminal to have read this early knowing that this will be a best seller by July. I cannot wait to get my hands on every edition they attempt to print.

Check your triggers, but as someone who has experienced trauma and has some still hibernating in her bones, this book healed a portion of that. Will be shouting about this one for many years to come. Bravo, Evann Normandin, Bravo.
Profile Image for Jaime Fok.
304 reviews5,250 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
May 7, 2026
4.5

You guys know I LOVE a dive into memory... and this book gave it all to me.

First things first, I would recommend this book as a ROMANTIC FICTION (a fiction with romantic themes), vs a contemporary romance. While romance was obviously a prominent element throughout the entire book, I would say if you're looking to escape into a dreamy romance story - this would not be the book for you.

Instead, we dive into characters who are flawed. We see their relationship that is messy. They both make the morally wrong decision at many points throughout their life with one another. But it all feels so authentic, and you can still feel their connection and love for each other throughout everything.

My favourite element of this book of course was the exploration into memory. What happens to a person when they erase their memory and start with a clean slate? Are they really even themselves anymore? Who are we really without those memories backing us? I was surprised at how much we dove into this theme throughout the book, I had expected the memory-erasing thing to just act as a plot device for the romance, but this ended up being more like the romance acted as a plot device for the memory story. I even started getting Severance vibes because of this brain/memory phenomenon that people were catching onto and voluntarily signing up for. They even called their pre-memory-loss-selves their "others", which added to the Severance connection for me.

Loved this so much, definitely got emotional at the end. Can't believe this is Evann Normandin's debut - can't wait to see what this author does next!!!
Profile Image for Tanya Rae.
91 reviews
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
May 8, 2026
The minute I heard other readers talking about this book, I knew I had to read it. It did not disappoint in the slightest, even though it wasn't quite what I was expecting. The premise is so interesting, a woman takes a pill for forgetting, which includes anyone and everything from their past. A man who is in love with her and intends to spend his life with her is forgotten and left behind. I should have realized by that description alone that I may be devastated by this book. But, I am not often moved to tears while reading. This book had me bawling by the end.

There were elements of the book that were a bit predictable, but it didn't take anything away from the story. I don't think it took away from the value of the book in the slightest. My only criticism of the book, beyond that, is that I found it a little bit hard to connect to Landon and Rose's love story. It was mainly hard to see from Landon's perspective why he loved Rose so much, because there wasn't a lot that felt like redeeming qualities. In some ways I'm a little glad that I didn't fall in love with Rose, right along with Landon, because my heart was already crushed by their story. Despite all of that, this book was so good. I am going to be thinking about it for a really long time.

I had a feeling I was going to enjoy the book, right from the get go. The writing was good and drew me in. It took a bit of time for me to connect fully with the story, but once I hit 50% I could not put it down until I knew how it concluded.

A huge thank you to NetGalley and Grand Central Publishing for this ARC in exchange for an honest review.
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