I was offered an ARC of this book in exchange of an honest review.
So, I loved this book. I gobbled it up in a few hours because I was just so happy to have it in my hands and to be reading about my beloved characters again. Bless Santino for deciding to revisit those two.
This book felt like reading about friends, or family. Because that’s what they’ve all become at this point. I feel like I know them – they’re all so wholesome and well-rounded and complicated – and I often catch myself thinking about them on random days. And I missed them.
It was so good to revisit, because this book also gathers those characters all together and it’s AMAZING. Ray and David, of course, but also my boys Mikey and Nunzio, and the Queens crew, and Aiden and Jace. Tonya and Mere!!! (please) Chris, my bro, I knew I got the vibe from him! (this needs to be developed further by the way). Also, Stephanie needs her own book (with a cameo from my boy Dominic ;)) (Yes, there can be 50 books in this series and you can bet I’m going to keep reading it)
This book is just so very pure. I’m glad Santino decided to write about an established couple and to show us what’s on the other side of the supposed “happily ever after” that usually romance novels end on. (For those of you wondering if this book was ‘necessary’ – I actually think that we don’t get enough of this in the genre. It usually ends with the characters confessing their feelings/deciding to be together ‘for real’/etc. In that matter, Sunset Park ended too abruptly for me. I needed more. And I got an established power couple still on a bumpy ride months into the relationship, doing their best to tackle their problems together.) And it was good, and real, and touching. Because not for one second did I doubt that they weren’t going to make it. Santino is good at writing true love, and making me believe in it :)
Also – and I just have to mention it, since David is such an underappreciated character – I love how Santino gave David constant validation. I love David so much, and I loved seeing him not being dismissed anymore – seeing it properly addressed and commented on. David’s narration was very sensitive, delicate, sometimes even poetic. (This is also a good moment to mention that it’s amazing how strong those two main voices are – easily recognizable, you know who’s leading the narration at the moment, they have their own language quirks, they focus on slightly different things. Good job.)
This book was about family – also about making your family bigger ♥ - and finding home. I’m so emotional right now. THAT EPILOGUE. To quote David: “I was a total goddamn wreck, but these Rodriguez men had me feeling all the feelings all the damn time”. I admit, I cried.