So this tale mostly deals with a love triangle. Why the author doesn't state that in the blurb is kind of beyond me. Probably because if romance lovers like myself are anything alike, they tend to not like angsty triangles with the potential for heartbreak, and characters that end up looking bad for ditching a current spouse. But it felt like a bait and switch, which I did not appreciate. At all. So that left me in a pissy mood once that tidbit came out. So I feel like it's only right to warn others about that.
Ruby is Lola Bloom, an lesbian romance novelist, who is seemingly very famous, having people stop her in the streets for autographs and selfies, and even has big photoshoots in magazines. Yeah this made me cringe, it was pretty unbelievable.
Madison meets her at a lesbian bookclub, and realizes she is her favourite novelist of her favourite book that got her through some tough times and helped her find faith in love and put herself out there again. There's an instant connection between them. LOTS of outrageous flirtation between them, and a few more meetings where they flirt some more, but Ruby never reveals the fact she is engaged to be married to Jen. Of course this also means Madison despite Ruby being her fave author, and supposedly being SO famous also doesn't know this. How that works I dunno, but there it is. She finally finds out, but they insist on still being friends, and working together on her new book cover - despite both clearly having feelings.
Jen is portrayed as a workaholic, out to impress her female power boss (yep obvious plotline is obvious) - she also has egotistical high brow friends who she wants to impress, one who actively insults their lesbian relationship, while Ruby gets upset, Jen passes it off as a joke.
It's pretty clear they are going for the 'potential wife isn't all she is cracked up to be, and there's issues' trope - so that somehow makes it OK that Ruby has feelings for Madison and is hedging her bets on both sides. Because of this I stopped reading. I hate that kind of 'trying to redeem a character of their flaws, through making another character worse with even worse flaws' trope. It's lazy and tedious. I found myself sighing and even saying out loud to the room 'this is so boring!'.
So I gave up after an hour of torturing myself and 30% of the book getting on my tits. Not rating to be fair, but I'd give it pretty low marks if I did.
Can I also say, the dialogue was incredibly stilted and unnatural between characters. Some were wayyyy over the top, like trying too hard and acting really immature. Others were just full of details that read like speeches or blogposts, not natural discussion. Quite strange.
I'd certainly be interested in hearing others reviews and take on it. But this was not for me.