This was a wonderful book to read. The two mains Ellison and Katie fit together perfectly and the flow was excellent with funny and interesting dialogues. This is the third and last book in a series, but I only read this book and had no problems reading it. If you’ve read the other books in the series, this will be the cherry on the cake, as several of the mains from the first two books make an appearance.
When I heard that one of the main story lines was about a baby wish I honestly wasn’t sure if this would be the best fit for me as I don’t connect to that at all, but the romance was done so expertly and the parts about Ellison’s struggles in life in getting her family and
children were clearly written from the heart. And for those who enjoy tropes, there are plenty present; a poor-rich trope, an age-gap, and a toaster oven romance.
I wouldn’t describe Katie and Ellison as opposites since their personalities are not that different, they both possess good social skills and are caring people, but still they were quite different as they are at completely different phases in their life. Ellison is in her early forties and has a successful career and while things are not going the way she wanted them to in her personal life, she has structure and stability. Katie on the other hand is in her late twenties and due to her mother needing expensive care, she is financially and emotionally struggling. When they meet though, their relation develops in such a natural way, even though Katie has never been in a same sex relationship, it’s really sweet and they just match perfectly.
They were some small things that didn’t work too well for me that I want to mention though. There was a communication issue, which seemed so silly because they generally had a very open and honest communication going on, so it felt out of place. The other thing is the ex turned best friend with occasional benefits. Yes, others have mentioned this as well, so I knew it was coming, and I thought I would have no problems with that (well, at least not in a book;)). But, it turns out that this raised several red flags for me when reading. At the start of the book I felt that the friends with benefits thing may actually have been one-sided and that Ellison was in love with Faith. I had trouble letting this go at start of the relationship between Ellison and Katie. I kept thinking will Ellison keep pining over Faith (as she did during a previous marriage)? Also, the fact that she did not discuss being ridiculously in love with Katie with her so called best friend seemed a bit weird. That’s what best friends are for right? From this, I again got the impression Faith was not a best friend, but still more someone in the romance/sex buddy category. Maybe it’s me, but it felt off.
This book deals with some difficult topics, but still felt relatively light and low on angst and I easily recommend this if you’re looking for a sweet romance.
I received an ARC from the publisher via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.