“Blend” is a very enjoyable sweet romance, narrated wonderfully by Paige McKinney – she’s so lyrical!
A year after their first, and only meeting, MC Piper and MC Lindsay are forced to work together when Piper’s mother, the owner of Vineyards wine bar, decides to take time off to travel. Contrary to the book blurb, btw, she travels to Florida and other states, she does not travel abroad. Lindsay is put in charge of day-to-day management and running of the wine bar, but Piper controls the bank account and must approve of any significant changes, which essentially puts Piper in charge.
Lindsay considers Piper to be ”uptight, snobbish and fucking hot” , whereas Piper considers Lindsay to be a hippie, remembering her as ”very friendly, and smiling too much”. Much of the book is very fun, as Piper and Lindsay continue to be attracted to each other, and yet battle over changes to Vineyards.
Piper is highly adverse to change in general, and to changes in the wine bar in particular. For her, it’s the embodiment of her deceased father, whom she misses terribly. Lindsay, though, is excited and anxious to implement changes and to grow the business by making enjoyment of wine less stuffy. Their interplay is very fun, and the title “Blend” is perfect as Piper comes to accept and then embrace blending in wine, and as a metaphor for life.
Two humorous (to me, anyway) things I just have to point out, though. Piper is portrayed initially as a wine snob, insisting on a glass of fine wine instead of a blend. So she orders a Castle Rock Pinot Noir 😂. Sorry to sound like a wine snob myself, but that’s a very mediocre, low-priced wine; hardly something a high-end wine bar would have on offer, or that someone like Piper would order! The other flaw is when Beers refers to kayaking Piper as wearing a “life jacket”. Sorry, Beers – it’s a PFD (Personal Flotation Device). Ok, these are quibbles, but I enjoy wine and I enjoy kayaking, and I loved that both played significant roles in our characters getting to know each other, and their slow burn romance, and it just struck me as humorous that Beers wrote so well of wine and kayaking, yet doesn’t appear to do either herself.
Most of the book is just really delightful, and there are lots of very funny moments, such as when Lindsay introduces her dog “Rocket” to Piper…using her Rocket dog voice…”My name is Rocket”!!
There are also some very sweet moments, such as when Piper accompanies Lindsay to her step-sister’s graduation party. Family gatherings are very anxious times for Lindsay, until this event!
Most of the time, I felt like the MCs were in their mid-twenties, but Piper is 38yo, and I think Lindsay is around 35yo. Still, both characters are very likable…until. Yep, at the 85% mark, Beers succumbs to a common, yet annoying, theme in lesfic – an artificial angst moment created by non-communication and/or a wrong assumption by one of the characters. Sigh. In this case, drunk Piper says and does something hurtful. I didn’t like that, and for me, the inevitable reconciliation and HEA felt unsatisfying. For me, the problem is that I��ve found that what people say and do while inebriated often reveals more about their true character than what they say and do while sober. It’s hard to forgive hurtful words if you can’t be sure that a sober apology might reflect more of who a person wants to be, than who they are.
So, what was a very enjoyable and highly entertaining sweet book derailed for me. I still recommend it, and I probably will even listen to it again one day…so much of it was so very fun, lighthearted and even silly. But, it’s not a 5* book because of the last 15%, and even my 4* rating is the result of rounding up, not rounding down.