3.5 Stars
The story follows Eliza and Graham, a couple celebrating their fifth wedding anniversary with a romantic getaway, a gift from Graham’s well-meaning parents. The resort, beautiful and scenic, along the Northern California coast, is all things romance and relaxation should be—but Eliza and Graham aren’t feeling like the happy loved up couple their friends and family think they are.
The truth is, Eliza and Graham are struggling to connect. Their love is strong and unbreakable, but work and all the other pressures of life have built a wall between them, and they both feel like they’ve lost the best parts of themselves and their relationship along the way.
When they arrive at the resort, a double booking has occurred, leaving Eliza and Graham with two rooms instead of the one they expected. Eliza, an audio narrator and ever the consummate actress, has a light-bulb moment, suggesting they take the two rooms and spend the week-long vacation pretending to be strangers, with the hopes of shaking off the rut they’re in and hopefully reigniting their spark by getting back to basics.
Graham, a bit more serious and strait-laced, is unsure and maybe a little hurt by the idea of sharing different rooms on their anniversary trip, but out of other options and desperate to make his wife happy, he agrees, trying his best to open his heart and mind to new things and, hopefully, regain some of that confidence he feels he’s lost along the way.
The dual perspective really helped things along here. It was clear from the get-go that these two were very much in love and in awe with each other still, but they had lost—or maybe they never had—their ability to be vulnerable and open with each other in all things, which caused a bit of an emotional rift between them. Playing strangers, as it were, definitely helped them be versions of themselves they wished to be/thought they’d lost, and it also helped them learn to communicate in healthier, more efficient ways, which I always find very appealing in romance stories like this.
I liked Graham and felt for his insecurities and his sense of not being good enough for the more vibrant and livelier Eliza. He was a lovely hero and I loved how he adored his wife, willing to go to any lengths to make his marriage strong again. I honestly didn’t think Graham had all that much to learn here, beyond needing a bit of a self-confidence boost—he was already pretty wonderful to me.
Eliza, on the other hand, was quite the surprise. At the onset of the story, I thought it would be Graham that needed to do a lot of introspection and self-growth to truly renew their marriage spark, and he did to a degree, but it was Eliza, who’s habit of avoidance of the hard conversations—not only in her marriage but with her family dramas too—that resulted in a bit of a reckoning and lead to major growth as a character. She bordered on frustrating for me at times, but eventually I respected the way she handled her role in her fractured relationships and changed for the better.
Full disclosure: I’m not fond of second-chance romances in general, especially not established couple/marriage-on-the-rocks type romances, like this one. I mostly just prefer to see romantic relationships grow from the beginning of a couples acquaintance, but lately second-change themes and established couple romances seem to be unavoidable as a romance reader, so I always try and keep an open mind and try new stories just in case. All of that is to say, I’m sure if I was into these tropes I would have loved this a lot more than I did, but in the end, I still felt the expected disconnect that usually comes for me when trying to be okay with reading about a couple who already has a whole history I haven’t been there to witness.
I will say I was fascinated by the fact the authors are a young married couple themselves, so I spent a great deal of time wondering how much of their storytelling and characters was autobiographical in some way. They definitely know how to write, with the story and characters feeling crisp and well-rounded from the very beginning, which went a long way in holding my attention.
Although these themes may not have been my cup of tea, I still had a nice, easy time reading this one, and I will most certainly be keeping an eye out for what these author’s come up with next in the world of romance.
Side note: the secondary character of David stole the entire show! I would willingly and eagerly read a whole book about this gentle-giant, hopeless romantic teacher, because he was an absolute delight on every page.