"I knew that tree was going to bring us together again."
Home for the Holidays. I planned to read it also during the holiday season, between Christmas and the New Year Celebration. I bought six Johanna Lindsay books from Booksale during the Holiday season, and this book was one of them. I chose this one particular book out of the bunch, because the title seems a perfect fit for the Holiday season reads. I've read the synopsis and Chapter 1 and I was hooked already. This was my kind of shit. Charmer Beguiled. The seducer is getting seduced instead. It started with a great start, I was really hooked, tbh. I can't even put it down. They cannot resist each other and I love it. It's very romantic, however, I hated the scene where Vincent was explaining to Larissa about his lies. While he was pouring it all out, I found it too cheesy for my liking. The thoughts were all over the place. I know the writer had it all planned that that's how the story will work, but I hope she instead put effort into it to make it more impactful. That confession was kind of underwhelming, tbh. It lacks yearning. The story kinda went down the hill when the father explained to Rissa why he was gone for months. That storytelling was kinda unnecessary. He could've told her in a brief explanation and I wouldn't even bothered. They wasted pages on it.
I thought the ten-year-old genius Larissa's little brother, Thomas, would have more cameos. To my disappointment, he only appeared for a few parts. His introduction was kinda giving "main character" vibes. I imagined him as someone who would rebut off Vincent's tactics and would catch his lies more easily, since he was this all-smart kid. Who doesn't love a smart kid who shows off during the Holiday season? (Exhibit A: Home Alone). That could've been a great character development. He seems kinda forgotten throughout the story. He only appears when Larissa is checking up on his health, and during the Christmas tree decorating scene. What a waste. I was honestly expecting more of him and craved more for his presence more than that of Jonathan Hale. He had this one conversation with Vincent that stuck with me and I wish the author had given more spotlight to our supporting character. Thomas was very intelligent. I imagine him as someone who could stand head-to-head with Vincent.
The "La Nymph" arc was kinda messy. I wish the author hadn't included that. It's messing up the story, imo. Jonathan Hale was kinda an unnecessary character in the story. Sorry, not sorry. I kinda appreciate his deep talks with Vincent, though.