Read for the 2017 April TBR Challenge: Contemporary
This is tax month (and yesterday was tax day in the US), so this story about a Senior Auditor with the IRS seemed appropriate. This book is part chick-lit, part family drama, and part whimsical comedy in the vein of movies like Sleepless in Seattle, as the heroine doesn't even meet the hero in person until the end of the book. They do interact over the phone and on the internet and learn about each other from third parties and articles, but the story is told entirely from the heroine’s first person point-of-view.
Sasha Gardner hasn’t had much luck in her dating life. She’s thirty-one and attractive, and her busy-body mother would love to see her settled with someone, but as soon as men find out she works for the IRS, they quickly become disinterested. It probably doesn’t help her case that she’s usually highly focused, has an analytical mind, and a quirky sense of humor. At work, her office’s hiring manager takes bets on her knowledge of obscure facts, and a recently hired archivist with OCD becomes interested in dating her.
When Sasha starts receiving calls at work from concerned citizens who are outraged that the IRS is auditing one of their favorite bloggers, she digs out Jonah Gray’s tax return from her pile of work and becomes intrigued by the man she finds on paper. Jonah Gray is the subject of a random audit. He was a journalist who left a lucrative job with the Wall Street Journal and is now working for a community newspaper in bucolic Stockton, California. He also runs a gardening blog in his spare time and posted a copy of the notification letter he received from the IRS, which is how his readership got Sasha’s name. As Sasha observes:
“The best auditors love to unravel the story that lurks in the data, to see hidden meanings and solve the puzzle.”
Jonah Gray becomes a puzzle that Sasha very much wants to solve. Why would he leave a high-paying and challenging job for the low-paying and rather dull job in Stockton? This puzzle also offers a welcome distraction from her other problems. Her father is terminally ill, her brother’s marriage is going through a rough patch, and the half-brother her family has long ignored reappears in their lives to help with her father’s in-home care. To date, she hasn’t had much contact with her half-brother. Her mother, ever sensitive about her husband’s long ago infidelity, wouldn’t even tolerate the mention of his name in her presence, but that’s all about to change.
I enjoyed Sasha’s whimsical voice and odd sense of humor quite a bit. The funny and serious sides of life are well balanced. Sasha’s friendships and burgeoning relationship with her half-brother are well done. As she discovers more about Jonah, she also discovers some interesting parallels, but ultimately, she’s on a path of self-discoveries. She’s been root-bound by her job, her family, and her safe-dating choices. As some relationships end, new ones are beginning. This sows the seeds for a romance rather than being one. It reminded me how we’re sometimes not ready for meeting that significant other until we’ve crossed certain bridges and had certain experiences. I enjoyed Sasha’s journey and feel confident that she and Jonah are now ready for each other.