(2.5 stars) - A very contemporary romance novel...
... just so you have an idea of what you're going into. How well you like this will depend on what you consider romantic.
So right off the bat we meet the protagonist at a low level influencer party with her trans makeup artist sidekick. She's trying to finesse some tickets to a bigger deal party with a mega-influencer who's apparently made it so big that she uses plural pronouns. JK.
Now I know there's a vocal minority who will insist my annoyance with that is because of hate or bigotry, but no, it's because I love words & how they allow us to express ourselves. We need words to mean what they mean, so that we can communicate in a shared language - that being the whole purpose of developing language in the first place. Better to make up your own instead of confusing people by trying to force new meanings on long established words.
It's a small thing, but it's an illustration of the effort the author has put into writing a romance that's acceptable to cancel culture. There's the villain Jeffrey who's white, sexist, shallow & corporate. She even throws in a mention of some evil white youtube guys who make fun of political correctness while also being racist - because, they'd just have to be, wouldn't they? 🙄
It's sad that 10 years later, Lily is still desperately trying to join the popular kids, as the story begins with us watching Lily working hard to be part of the popular crowd. And Tobin is adrift looking for direction, struggling with the YouTuber equivalent of writer's block.
Now, I like reading books that introduce me to jobs that I don't know much about. The problem is that the story more or less confirms the stereotype that social influencers are basically just varying levels of numbers-obsessed, hold-my-beer popularity chasers. Desperate to find or be the next big thing. Which is a shallow, meaningless existence. And boring. (I know there are plenty of exceptions, but what I'm saying is that I didn't learn that here)
At 25% into the story, it's still setting things up, and I'm so not getting into the story. Finally, chapter 12 begins their collaboration & the story picks up a bit. Lily's sympathetic but not especially likeable until Tobin starts bringing out her more relaxed side. Which helps. Some.
Then we get into Lily's need to scratch her sex itch. Bleh. Yes, talking about sex as an animal urge that needs to be satisfied is as engaging as talking about being hungry and wanting to eat. Way to make sex boring, too.
They're getting together because they're both sex starved, in proximity, & their subscribers are shipping them. How sentimental.
Wait! 66% in and Lily wants more than a shallow, meaningless hookup - I'm kind of pleasantly surprised, but waiting to see what that translates to in contemporary romance terms.
Their paths converge and then they diverge. Well that's a classic romance development.
Sure, Lily is self-absorbed in not seeing Tobin's needs, but Tobin actually told his followers his news before he sprung it on her which seems pretty crappy. Surprised that wasn't an issue, but I guess that's normal for media influencers?
After devoting the entire book to being carefully PC and in touch with the zeitgeist of the age, the end turns all Hallmarky (plus another sex scene added on) which I thought was pretty unintentionally & ironically funny.
There's actually a decent traditional romance plot mixed in with all the other stuff. Whether or not you enjoy it will depend on how you feel about all the other stuff.
*Potential Content:
Fairly frank talk; several graphic descriptions of sex
PC gender fluid & gay stereotyped characters
Medium level use of swears, including 31 f-bombs
Some 8 dozen disrespectful & insensitive uses of God's Name, including 4 as curses