*I received an advance copy of this book from Putnam Books. All thoughts are my own*
Jenny Bayliss is officially on my auto-read list. She writes such wonderfully cozy, funny, touching romances, and Meet Me Under the Mistletoe is no different.
Nory is a bookshop owner in London; she’s basically a matchmaker for books and the people who are meant to have them, which was a concept I loved. One of her closest childhood friends is getting married near Christmas and is using the occasion to get the old gang together for a week-long reunion at a beautiful estate near their old school. The group is forever linked, partly by their own history, and partly by the member who’s missing: Tristan, who died by suicide several years before. At the estate, Nory is also reunited with a childhood enemy, Isaac, who’s now the estate’s gardener.
There were so many things I loved about this book. The friendships were the top highlight for me; I’m a sucker for found families, and Bayliss did it so well, not only with Nory’s eclectic group of childhood friends, but also with her friends in London. I also really enjoyed Nory’s complicated and relatable relationship with her actual family. Nory has inhabited a variety of worlds in her life and has had to learn to balance them and become the person she wants to be without giving in to the expectations of others. The people around her have shaped her and continue to help her grow, and I loved seeing that. I also really loved seeing how she let Isaac in and how, in turn, he let down his walls to make room for her too.
Jenny Bayliss writes the type of books I want to give to all my closest friends. They're like a warm hug, and I'm always left feeling warm and happy when I finish reading them. I was completely charmed by this delightful book, just as I have been with Bayliss’s other novels. With a blend of heavy themes and humour, moments that tugged on my heartstrings, made me laugh, frustrated me, and made me swoon, Meet Me Under the Mistletoe hit all the right notes for me.