Rating 3.25 stars, rounded down to 3.
Alyssa "Aly" Aresti has always been a fixer - whether it be her parents, her job, her boyfriends, she's always trying to solve other people's problems. Aly, with her coworkers, Eric and Tola, decide to use Aly's powers to good use and start a service called Fixer Upper, which helps women who are tired of the emotional cost of motivating their partners to work on themselves. Whether it be working towards a dream career, leaving their dead-end job, or taking the next step in their relationship, Aly and team would use subtle suggestion and psychology to motivate these men to do the work themselves. After some success, a famous reality star/influencer hires Fixer Upper to help motivate her app developer boyfriend to get his start-up funded AND propose within a month. The added twist? Her boyfriend is Dylan James, Aly's childhood best friend and first love - the one that got away. It's Aly's first instinct to walk away from this, but when her Mom suddenly needs money to help save her home, Aly is left with no choice but to take the job and risk losing Dylan forever.
From the beginning, we learn that Aly is quite the flawed character. She's a workaholic who allows herself to be gaslit and disrespected by her boss and colleagues, all for the sake of a promotion that we as readers know she'll never get. Her mom is extremely emotionally dependent on her to referee a broken marriage that she can't seem to give-up on. And come to find out, every dead-beat, project boyfriend she's had since adulthood has gone on to be successful, thanks to her emotional labor. Meanwhile, Aly's life has stagnated. This book, although advertised as a romance, is largely about Aly coming to terms with her "fixing" and realizing that she's been putting herself on the back-burner for people who take advantage of her. Although this is extremely frustrating to see as a reader, I did enjoy seeing Aly grow and become a person who is willing to stand-up for herself and go after the things she wants.
As for the romance aspect, Aly and Dylan are former childhood friends that became strangers after an incident that could have easily been resolved by talking. I will say, since they were teenagers at the time, I can buy into the fact that Aly misunderstood the situation and ran away to protect herself. However, when they meet again many years later, it is again a lack of communication and trust that breaks them apart. Obviously, you can tell I am not a fan of the miscommunication trope. All in all, I found the romance between them to be a little weak. I wasn't all that invested in their relationship, as I believed that Aly still had a lot of self-discovery and self-healing to go through before she should be committing to someone.
I think the premise of this story is a little unrealistic, but if you can get past it, I think it's a fun read. To me, the highlight of this book, and the reason you should read it, is for Aly's personal development, rather than the relationship between her and Dylan. Overall, I found this book to be a quick and entertaining read, but it was not compelling enough for me to be engaged in the story or relationships. I can see this book being a five-star read for the right person, but it didn't quite hit the mark for me.
Content warnings: Gaslighting, and misogyny; brief mentions of cheating, car accident, and parent death
(Note: I was provided an advanced copy of The Fixer Upper by the publisher via NetGalley, in exchange for an honest review.)