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Houston, Texas, 1965 When an accident rocks the American Space Department, threatening the race to the moon, the agency is determined to eliminate distractions, including those in the bedroom. Astronaut Dean Garland, on track to become the first man to walk in space, is fine with putting a temporary hold on his love life. Except the directive comes too late to prevent the biggest distraction of Vivian Muller… Garland. But now that he’s married, Dean is determined to follow the rules until he makes history with his space walk. Vivy never expected to find herself pregnant or in a shotgun marriage, much less a sexless one. While her new husband might pretend to be perfectly happy sleeping alone, Vivy never believed in pretending or holding back. She’s determined to make her husband fall for her even if it means bending—or breaking—the rules. Dean’s resolve to keep marriage and work separate hits another serious the suit he’s supposed to wear in the killer vacuum of space isn’t reliable, and his new father-in-law manufactured it. As Dean unravels the technical problem and Vivy tries to win her husband’s love, their hearts and his life hang in the balance.

258 pages, Paperback

First published May 27, 2018

9 people are currently reading
218 people want to read

About the author

Emma Barry

29 books222 followers
Emma Barry is a teacher, novelist, recovering academic, and former political staffer. She lives with her high school sweetheart and a menagerie of pets and children in Virginia, and she occasionally finds time to read and write.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 51 reviews
Profile Image for Briar's Reviews.
2,316 reviews579 followers
June 5, 2018
Free Fall by Emma Barry is one of the sweetest, feel good books of the year!

Thank you to Tamsen Parker who suggested I pick up books by Emma Barry! I can't thank her enough, because Emma's writing is beautiful and matches perfectly with my reading style.

Free Fall is about Dean and Vivian, an astronaut and the daughter of of a wealthy businessman, who happen to find themselves in a sticky situation. They are expecting a baby and they have to get married to "set things right". This story follows their relationship and the troubles of Dean's career.

This book really made me feel good - it's ooey gooey cute and isn't negative. It's the type of book you'd want to read when you are in a bad mood because it will pick you up. Yes, there's drama in this book (it's a romance novel, there's bound to be some kind of drama), but it doesn't make you feel bad. I love a book that lets me sink into it's words and feel great, and Emma does that perfectly.

I'm also so incredibly excited to see a book about a woman with a full figure that isn't solely about her weight. Vivy embraces her full figure, and isn't described as "fat". I can fully relate to Vivian - I've always been athletic, and as a child I was told by other kids I was "fat" because I wasn't super skinny like everybody else was in my classes. Being told to stay silent, be smaller, etc., just like Vivy was my life until I got older. It's nice to see the storyline develop with the introduction to her body type, but not revolve around her weight. Too often do we see differences (whether it's gender, sexuality, weight, etc) be used as the problem or plot line of the story, but this book embraced her as a person.

I'd like to see more of Dean and Vivian - I think they're characters are well developed and could definitely hold their own in a series! I'm not sure where we could take them, but they were very cute! These characters do develop and face issues in this story.

Now the big question - do I have any cons (since I've listed many pros). If anything, I would have liked the book to be longer! Maybe a little more drama or action between the couple themselves. That's my only suggestion to improve, because this was a really good book! It's a worth while read! The book was "long enough", but I could see this book including a few extra chapters and work just as well!

Overall, this book was truly beautiful! It's a nice read to embrace on a soft, summer day! I highly recommend this book and declare it a romance must-read! It's also not even close to an R rating (there are some sexy scenes, but nothing a PG-13 warning label won't cover). So if you love romance and a happy ending, then this book will be for you!

Five out of five stars!

I received an ARC copy from the author Emma Barry in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Anne.
391 reviews69 followers
May 22, 2021
3.5 stars.

I love this series. Smarts and sex, ambition and daring, glitz and glamour amid the 1960s space race. What's not to love? Alas, Free Fall wasn't my favorite installment.

The "surprise baby and shotgun marriage" trope is hit-or-miss for me (not to mention that as someone who experienced "all day sickness" well into my second trimester, I can't relate to the heroines being perpetually aroused during said pregnancies, but more power to them). So I was a bit skeptical concerning the marriage of convenience between heartthrob astronaut Dean and rebellious college student Vivy. Still, I was hopeful that these authors could make it work for me.

But as the story progressed, I never fully believed in Vivy and Dean as a couple. I believed the lust, sure, but not much else. Moreover, I struggled to connect to the characters. Vivy's woman child persona had me scratching my head, the juxtaposition of "confident and experienced sexpot" with "immature sorority girl who can't boil noodles." Her character would have worked much better as a recent college graduate. Meanwhile, Dean came across nebulous. His private persona unfortunately read as little personality. Tension arises between the couple due to the astronauts' "no sex rule" and the role of Vivy's father's company, which manufactured defective space equipment for ADS. However, the emotional impact of Dean's secrecy and Vivy's torn loyalties was somewhat muted.

Did I mention that I love this series? I do, which is why I'm bummed that I didn't love this particular entry. Nevertheless, it was well-written and sharp, and I certainly hope that it doesn't mark the end of the series.
Profile Image for PlotTrysts.
1,219 reviews475 followers
January 12, 2026
This is a book about a youthful fling with serious consequences, as the youngest astronaut, Dean, gets the daughter of a government contractor pregnant and they find themselves unexpectedly married. It's a marriage of convenience plot in that what could have been a terrible relationship ends up making both Dean and Vivy discover more about themselves through their rapprochement with each other.

I have to admit that I love a larger, confident heroine, and freewheeling Vivy is a great character to follow! Fun & sexy.
Profile Image for Grace.
1,388 reviews46 followers
January 10, 2022
So I liked this overall, but it lacked some of the magic that the rest of the series held for me overall. I think there are two reasons for this:

1) I'm still in a bit of a podcast backlog, so I just listened to the Elda Minger interview on Fated Mates about two weeks ago. It was hard not to think about that conversation while reading this particular story, or to think about people I know in my own life that got pregnant around this time and got married because they had almost no other choices. So some of this was just about when I read this, rather than the book itself. I was very aware of that as I was reading it, and I tried not to hold it against the story.

2) That said, it still felt like there were some things here that weren't fully developed the way I would have liked/the way I expect from this series. I liked both characters a lot, and I really liked Vivy and the way she grew through the course of the book, but I needed more from their relationship to believe they actually fell in love. I do believe they liked each other, but so much of the book involved this big secret and an inability to talk to each other. It felt like they didn't really know each other enough to be in love. The entire subplot with the space suit and her father also just felt a bit unresolved. And maybe that's because there is no good resolution there, but it also involved me putting the book aside to do some research on the early days of strict products liability in the US (it was in its infancy in the 1960s). All I could think about is the amount of lawsuits that would eventually be brought against her father's company if he kept conducting business that way. That said, I did read this for 20th century vibes for #SnowInLoveBingo, and I'm not sure what feels more 20th century America than the space race and grossly irresponsible and unsafe business practices that put people's lives at risk for the sake of capitalism.
Profile Image for Maria Rose.
2,637 reviews267 followers
September 24, 2018
Free Fall by Emma Barry and Genevieve Turner is the latest romance in the author duo’s Fly Me to the Moon series. It’s set in the early days of the space race between the Americans and the Soviets. With a fascinating mix of fact and fiction and emotionally engaging characters, it’s a series not to be missed. Each story reads well as a standalone with a compelling romance amid the successes and failures of various missions.

When astronaut Dean Garland meets Vivian Muller at a party, their one night stand results in an unexpected pregnancy followed quickly by a shotgun wedding. Neither Dean nor Vivy was given any choice in the matter especially since Vivy’s father is a wealthy defense contractor who works with the space program. The one thing Dean and Vivy have in common is sexual attraction which should be enough to start their marriage off right, but to Vivy’s dismay, Dean’s told her he isn’t allowed any ‘distractions’ of the romantic or sexual kind due to a training accident for which an astronaut with a party going reputation was deemed at fault.

Adjusting to marriage with a stranger and no sex? No way. Vivy is determined to make the best of things and entice her husband back into the bedroom. But the training Dean is involved in to make the first space walk is no joke. With the pressure on, can Dean and Vivy survive the first few months of their marriage intact, and discover real love waiting in the wings?

For more of this review please visit Harlequin Junkie: http://harlequinjunkie.com/review-fre...

A copy of this story was provided by the authors for review.
Profile Image for Kay.
652 reviews1 follower
August 14, 2018
Gah, I love this series. Barry-and-Turner do such a great job of infusing it with all the fun stuff of the American 60s. And none of the terrible tragedy or cataclysmic changes: it's not that they're not aware or that it doesn't linger, or hang over the narrative, like the women's movement. They manage to write in a comic mode that still makes the historical period believable.

MoC is my favourite trope so I was already pretty much sold on this novel. I loved it even more than I thought I would. The heroine and hero were wonderful, as was the depiction of their relationship. The attraction was there, even some liking; they simply didn't know each other. When they start to do so, they are beset by how very very much they like each other, the scariness of their feelings' intensity and importance. Also, there's an epistolary element and it's the bestest. If you'd like to read a more extensive review, feel free to follow the link to my blog:

https://missbatesreadsromance.com/201...

Please note I received an e-ARC from the authors.
Profile Image for Brandy Painter.
1,691 reviews356 followers
September 3, 2018
This was perfectly wonderful and charming. I enjoyed both Vivy and Dean as characters. This is a lighter book in tone overall than some of the more recent ones in the series, but it still has tremendous depth and good character development. I like Vivy's vast interests and her connections with the women in her life: her old bonds with her sorority sisters and her new ones with the astronaut wives. Dean is very much the strong silent type, and the struggle he has with reconciling that with his vivacious new wife is portrayed well. I also really loved the bond and interactions between him and his dad.
Profile Image for Tori.
998 reviews31 followers
September 23, 2018
Loved this.

While it's not a marriage of convenience, the book has a lot of the staples that make that trope so good for me, especially because Vivy and Dean are trying to live without sex.

I adored Vivy. She was so much herself, and I loved that about her. The romance and chemistry between her and Dean was excellent.
Profile Image for Cathy Geha.
4,350 reviews119 followers
July 29, 2018
Free Fall by Genevieve Turner & Emma Barry
Fly Me To The Moon #6

Vivian “Vivy” Muller’s laugh drew Major Dean Garland to her side at a party they both were invited to. With little ado they made their escape only to find themselves soon wed to one another as a result of that one night they spent together. Vivy, a wealthy sorority girl, juggles being a student and an astronaut’s wife as she gets to know the quiet man she is married to. Dean finds that the home Vivy has created and her chatter provide something his life was missing. With work tense as he prepares to go up into space and secrets and rules that are impacting his time with Vivy there is often tension between the couple that is stressful to both of them. The way they find their HEA and a true relationship is a joy to read. Vivy is strong and wise and giving with a heart of gold and Dean is so much more than the seemingly cold quiet face he presents to the world.

I have to say that this series is one of my favorite ever. It takes me back in time and reminds me of my past. One scene in the book that uses a candle to announce an engagement to sorority sisters reminded me of my own “blow out” when in nursing school. These stories make me feel and care and hope and remember…I love them all!

Thank you to the authors for the ARC – this is my honest review.

5 Stars
Profile Image for Christina (A Reader of Fictions).
4,579 reviews1,759 followers
July 22, 2020
Looking at the description of this, I wasn't sure I was going to like it, because a hookup leading to a pregnancy and marriage of convenience is absolutely not my trope. However, this was actually really consistently adorable. Vivy's so thoroughly charming, living how she wants without regrets. It's amazing how little she judges herself for what she's done, even with the obvious consequences; she's not quite a Pollyanna, but she does always try to focus on making the best of things. Dean, meanwhile, is gruff on the surface to protect his squishy insides which is a character type I do love a lot. The whole order for the astronauts not to have sex is ridiculous, but it works for a romance novel, adding a cute tension to everything.
Profile Image for Elizajane40.
267 reviews16 followers
June 24, 2022
This didn’t quite live up to the last two I read in the series, but it was a very solid romance. The h was just so young in such a young way. There was was definitely (deliberately?) a sense of puppy love. There was also a puppy! Nothing wrong with that, but the other two I read were more… fraught.
Profile Image for Jess.
3,603 reviews5 followers
August 1, 2018
This was charming, this series is charming. I really liked Vivy and Dean and all their contrasts. I sort of love that they had to bond without sex, even though I fully felt both of them on their frustration.

I like these books so damn much.
Profile Image for Cait.
2,718 reviews4 followers
August 1, 2018
SO CHARMING AND DELIGHTFUL.
I thought I was in a place where I was annoyed with stupid dudes who don't talk, but I think getting Dean's POV helped mitigate that a lot.
Profile Image for Kelleen (booms.books).
299 reviews49 followers
December 13, 2021
This book is fantastic. Unique, thoughtful, and funny. And so so swoony.

Also this is a curvy heroine who worries about being “too much” and if that doesn’t hit me right my heart places…
Profile Image for Sabrina.
873 reviews
October 14, 2024
So first thing’s first - this book is done a disservice in coming after Earth Bound. No book should be expected to do that. And the fact that this book is in the same series? Unfair. (Anyways - go read Earth Bound.)

But Free Fall stands on its own as the next installment in the Fly Me to the Moon series, continuing on with the ASD’s (fake NASA) journey to the moon while also serving up an angsty shotgun wedding situation.

While the physical burn in this book is short, the emotional burn is so deliciously long when it comes to Vivy and Dean (he’s a cowboy astronaut btw 🤠) falling in love with one another after their wedding. That said, I would have loved to have a bit more of Dean’s POV and the angsty pining as Vivy’s feelings were very clear from the narrative. Yes, Dean is a self-described quiet man but as a Romance reader, I would have loved to peek inside his noggin.

When it comes to the other major plot-point - the faulty astronaut suits DESIGNED BY Vivy’s father’s company (ooooh the drama!) - the slow building tension and anxiety was so well done. I always love when Barry and Turner give us scenes between the astronauts; seeing the brotherhood between the men at the discovery of the fault suits and then the decision on what to do with the knowledge was well in accord with the romantic plotline.

I could read about ASD’s latest mission plans, how the astronauts and their partners are handling whatever it is, and seeing a new couple falling in love until the series caught up to modern times. I am not exaggerating. The world that Barry and Turner have created is so rich in detail and vibes of the 1960s while not romanticizing the past. There’s drama in both plot lines - romance and the race to space - that always keeps me engaged, no matter the couple.

2,207 reviews6 followers
April 3, 2023
A very interesting book. I don’t usually read historical romance, but since this book takes place when I was in 6th-7th grade, it doesn’t feel exactly historical to me. Just aged, I guess. This is one of those stories that got me on edge, almost such that I didn’t want to go on. But I’ve learned that often those plots and characters lead to some of the best reading, and that was true of this book. Vivy and Dean are characters for whom I had a lot of sympathy - they were both very much between a rock and a hard place and trying to figure things out. It’s interesting to read a “human” story (fictional though it is) related to the space program, where I remember so much of the news about it.
Profile Image for Natalie.
1,780 reviews29 followers
May 22, 2022
I'm such a big fan of this series and it saddens me to know that I only have one book left. It's evident how much research goes into each one of these but it all feels very naturally woven in and there's such a great sense of time and place, as Barry and Turner show women fighting for their own kind of independence in a way that's still accurate to the early 60's. Vivy and Dean are opposites in the best way and seeing them fall for each other was a delight, from their initial flirtation to the final swooningly romantic letter.
Profile Image for Trianna/Treereads.
1,144 reviews54 followers
August 6, 2024
Not my favorite trope by any means, but if these two write it I'm going to enjoy it!! I did want more moments between Dean and Vivy bc the suit problem took up a lot of page time.

Also A PARSON'S POV and NO CHARLIE MENTION ?! rude
Profile Image for Alison.
1,025 reviews103 followers
September 29, 2020
Very fun to read a historical romance from the 1960s as a change!
Profile Image for Gretchen Alice.
1,223 reviews128 followers
July 6, 2018
As always, I cannot recommend this series enough. This romance set in the Space Race era in Houston combines fascinating characters with a genuine love for space and science. Free Fall places a stoic astronaut into a shotgun marriage with a vivacious sorority girl whose daddy runs the company that makes the space suits. Dean and Vivy are mostly opposites (with intense chemistry, of course) and when she gets unexpectedly pregnant, there's only one thing for them to do. Getting hitched is only the first of their problems, what with Dean going into space soon. Vivy is such a good heroine--she feels everything very deeply and makes her choices with a degree of rebelliousness and spunk. She's also committed to finishing her degree and is forthright about her weight. Dean could have easily veered into the boring category, but the chapters from his viewpoint do show his character growth as well. (There's a scene where he deals with being a real-life astronaut that is one of the best things about space that I've ever read.) As with the rest of Barry's and Turner's books, their physical relationship is ultra hot, too. Thanks to the authors for giving me an early sneak peek!

If you like romance novels, you can currently preorder an e-box set with the first three books in the series for less than a dollar. Seriously, get on that.
Profile Image for Frida.
817 reviews30 followers
August 14, 2018
But she checked with her body, and it turned out she couldn't find her good sense. She must have left it in her other handbag.
Which somehow Dean knew, because he said, "I live down the street. Let me show you my telescope."


These two KIDS seriously! :D No but I adore this series and this book is no exception. It's very much Dean and Vivy's book and they're just not up there at the top of the list (that's Charlie and Parsons fyi) of Characters I'm Interested In (I mean Obsessed With). Every book is so different in this series and this was great in a 60s dresses and cocktail fun kind of way.
444 reviews9 followers
July 29, 2019
Oh, boy.

There was no problem here, don't get me wrong. This was witty and clever and lovely, but just not my catnip at all. I caught myself looking for the other characters in the scenes and loving when Parsons and Jeffries came to the podium. Somehow Vivy and Dean, while being wonderful characters, could not focus my attention as much as the others did in the previous novels.

Shoutout to the scene where Carruthers gets injured, it was great portrayal with bringing in poetry.

P.s.: I know we still have an astronaut to marry off after Carruthers but can we please get more with the engeneers and computers? I need the story of Jeffries and I need one on Dot so we can have Charlie in our lives again. Also, I would love to read the one they've pulled back with Beverly and the woman astronaut.
Profile Image for Myfanwy.
496 reviews15 followers
June 1, 2020
The Barry/Turner writing partnership continues to produce well-researched romance novels that are completely unlike any other historical romance novel I’ve encountered. Unlike most other historical romance series, these books provide a great sense of the cultural changes occurring, and nowhere more starkly than Free Fall. While both Star Dust and Earth Bound feel pretty strongly rooted in the 1950s in the heroine’s outlook on their situations, Free Fall is the first book where the culture of the 60s seems to sharply assert itself. Both Dean and Vivy, who are both much more open in their attitudes towards life than Star Dust’s Kit and Anne Marie, most notably in their attitudes towards sex. While Anne-Marie’s conflict over her desire to have a relationship with Kit and her unwillingness to become wholly dependent on a man again is never really resolved, in Free Fall Vivy and Dean are both clear that she will continue to have a life outside of her family, through both her studies and her prospective role in her father’s company (although the succession is never really explained). Dean also gets the chance to be more domestically capable than Kit by being far more competent in the kitchen than Vivy.
Also, I loved Vivy. She’s just great. Big Girl solidarity all the way.
I wasn’t super crazy about the sex ban plot point, since I thought it was pretty dumb and baseless, especially coming from Parsons, man who is all about evidence and also spent Earth Bound having a lot of sex and emotions and also being very competent at his job. What is the rationale behind a sex ban? Sure, it could be a problem if someone was slutting it up every night and making headlines or everyone was getting the clap or something, but not because sex is a ‘distraction’. Also, the previous books have all clearly established that the astronauts don’t really like Parsons and barely respect him, so it also seemed entirely out of character to me that they would suddenly decide that they were going to follow such a bizarre and baseless edict of his. It mostly felt kind of lazy from a writing standpoint, especially since there seemed to be so many other potential points of conflict that would do a lot more to develop the characters than a sex ban put in place by a third party, the reasons for which are never really explained. This was the book’s biggest weakness for me, especially since it’s supposed to drive so much of the conflict for the first third of the book.
Profile Image for ToriLovesHea’s.
537 reviews98 followers
January 19, 2024
The chokehold this series has on me at the moment is unreal.

I already love surprise pregnancy. Love it. Adore it. Can’t get enough of it. But this is the 60’s sooooooo we get a one night stand to surprise pregnancy to shotgun wedding. I devoured it.

I think the reason I enjoyed this so much, even if at time I wanted a little bit more interaction between MCs, was because it poses the question “if physical intimacy is the only way we know each other and that’s off the table, what tf are we supposed to do?” And it worked SO well here. Parsons (from book 2!) gave the astronauts strict no boning orders and Vivy is not at all pleased about it. She’s newly married! She wants her husband! What are they supposed to do if they can’t bang it out!

Cause Vivy is young. She’s 19 fixing to be 20, pregnant by and married to a man she legit met once. Plus she’s been her rich daddy’s darling her whole life. So while we’re exploring this relationship dynamic, we also get to see Vivy grow into her own and become more independent from her parents. I just really loved her. She’s a fire cracker and proud of it.

And Dean’s journey was just as special. A lot of his reluctance to explore a love match with Vivy is because he’s bottled every bit of grief over his mother’s death up and just shoved it down down down. But Vivy makes him FEEL and it made me FEEL and everybody is FEELING things.

So. Ya know, the whole “my father in law made a space suit that will for sure definitely kill is” is going on in the background. But it’s pretty much Dean and Vivy trying to find their footing. The authors could have used the whole “ugh I want to be single and bang around not be a husband and dad” angle but they didn’t and I think it was very sweet to see Dean READY to be a dad even if he’s also scared shitless. Ugh. My heart.
Profile Image for Ronda.
586 reviews3 followers
March 1, 2025
I have been loving this series and I have a couple of novellas still to read (YAY!). But this is probably my least favorite of the series. It started so strong and the ending was really great but Vivy is not the heroine I wanted in this book. There were things I loved about her but there were other things that made me angry. She came across as spoiled and immature and honestly, I didn't see much growth.



I know that was kind of a rant and you are probably looking at that 4 star rating and thinking "huh?" but I stand by the 4 stars. I do really love this book and this series. I especially love the time period of this series - we need more HR set in the mid-twentieth century and astronauts and anyone surrounding the space program is a unique background too.
1,034 reviews
February 19, 2019
I'm loving this series. The authors have done a great job of creating the atmosphere of this time period. Right now, I'm reading a contemporary romance, and I am just wanting to finish so I can be back in the Fly Me to the Moon series ASAP.

For some reason, I missed the fact that Dean is shy at the beginning of the book. He seemed about as outwardly unsentimental as men of the time were expected to be, but his shyness and reserve became more clear in the second half of the book. This might be because a lot needs to happen plot-wise at the beginning, so the character depth has to come later. I know that Vivy also doesn't recognize how shy he is until later, so I realize this is probably in part a choice on the authors' part.

My favorite thing about Vivy is her loyalty, and that she doesn't misplace it or let it lead her blindly. She's very young, but she grows and makes mature, difficult decisions.
Profile Image for Jessica.
432 reviews
August 10, 2018
Another great, fun read in the "Fly Me to the Moon" series. This one features socialite and sorority girl Vivian Muller and her shotgun marriage to astronaut Dean Garland. This was a well-written romance but to me it lacked some of the complexity of other books in the series, especially "Earth Bound." That is, Viv was 10 years younger than her husband, a bit insecure, and she goes into her marriage with boundless enthusiasm and confidence, and that rang a little hollow to me. I did like how Barry and Turner explored how Dean's more taciturn nature didn't mean he wasn't listening or that he wasn't a good communicator. The secondary conflict in this book about Viv's dad, the head of a major defense contractor, made for an interesting plot twist. I thought the authors did an excellent job of not keeping him a complex character rather than a simple villain.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 51 reviews

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