I've read many a book by Erynn Mangum, and most of them repeatedly (insert shout-out to the Lauren Holbrook and Maya Davis series here!). _Mind the Gap_ is hands-down my favorite book and, imho, Mangum's best yet. She absolutely outdid herself here.
It's not just the London setting, or the glorious day trips to surrounding areas (Bath!), or the Austen or Marvel or _North and South_ or Richard Armitage references. (Pardon me while I swoon. #justbeingreal) And we may have to disagree about which Knightley is more swoonworthy (it's obviously Mark Strong :D, and I might have watched that version of "Emma" last night just to reconvince myself; that's my story and I'm sticking to it). No, pair that with all the faith gems Mangum is known for and some downright conviction in my own life accordingly, and ... man. Kate and Gran might be able to take or leave Harry Potter, but I gotta say, all of the above truly combined to perfectly illustrate Golpalott's Third Law (where the sum of something is greater than its individual parts; see _Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince_ for more).
A couple phrases might have overused their welcome a tad bit (smiles not reaching their eyes, or fingers weaving together), but that's entirely small potatoes in this glorious read that brought everything I love about England back to the forefront. I've visited there multiple times (and Timehop has been reminding me my last visit was 4 years ago this week, in fact!), and _Mind the Gap_ was a blessed stand-in for travel during these wonky pandemic times.
A verse from Psalm 37 was a running theme throughout the read, and I loved how Mangum approached it from different angles and explored its applicability in life no matter one's circumstances. I particularly related to this line from Kate, about 70% of the way in: "I really hope I’m not the only person on the planet this happens to. Surely the Lord does this to more people than me, but I swear every time I’m faced with some big issue, it’s like I can’t get away from it. God uses sermons, people and the Bible to hammer it into my thick skull." I could go on, but Goodreads tells me I made 75 highlights in the book ... which makes me wonder what, exactly, I _didn't_ highlight. Ha!
I highly recommend the read (could you tell? :D) and can't wait to discuss it with fellow readers/fans.
I received a copy of the ebook from the author. All opinions are my own.