This book was a disappointing miss for me. It's really quite a shame this author has departed from writing Christian fiction because her themes would fit well in that genre.
The way former enemies helped and comforted each other was my absolute favorite thing about this book.
The fierce loyalty Taylor and Liv felt toward Gemma was completely beautiful.
I loved how Gemma discovered the truth of divorce, that it's ugly for those going through it, and that that people's hopes and personalities can get crushed along the way.
The way Gemma found her gumption to stand up for her business ethics was excellent.
Now for the not so savory bits.
Teens chatted frankly about sex and whether or not to hold out or cave to keep their boyfriends. Gemma missed a humongous opportunity here. She talked to them about "you don't have to do anything you don't want to do," which is true. But she didn't guide them wisely toward the Bible and what God says about sex, that it's an intimate act He created to be between only a man and his wife, that outside of that relationship, diving into such an intimacy would be sinful and wrong.
It was strange that two full-grown women reverted to teen talk as if they were the ones currently in high school.
"We all got older and he just got hotter?"
"I know, right? UNFAIR."
It was sad that it was assumed small-town living was all about underage drinking--not exactly the sort of thing to be promoting in an already drunken society, and definitely not a good role model for teens.
"Did you even live in a small town if you didn't drink straight from the bottle while sitting on the tailgate of an older boy's truck?"
Alcohol was excessively mentioned.
The sexual content was excessive. The level was worse than the worst Hallmark movie I've ever seen but a couple notches better than a trashy Harlequin novel. This included innuendo, detailed tongue kissing, a lady straddling a guy while kissing him, lots of mentions of physical reactions to each other, lots of mentions of ogling people's bodies and muscles and overall "hotness," and more. "Falling hopelessly in lust" seemed to be the main theme of the book (this one definitely would NOT fit into the Christian fiction genre).
There were a couple of on-page curse words. It was implied that the leading lady was fond of "choice words." Not a great role model for a teen, so I'm not sure why she was put in charge of one.
A "true gentleman" wouldn't let things go beyond chaste behavior before putting a ring on her finger and giving her a wedding. Stephen did not meet those simple requirements, then or now.
Granny Pearl and the magic of Haven Ridge were was unrealistic as Irene Hannon's Charley and magical animals in the Hope Harbor series. They're great examples of why Magic Realism is a difficult genre for me.
I won't be continuing this series or trying any additional books by this author.
Content: crude sexual terms, woman called her stepdaughter a "wench," sexual innuendo, sexual immorality mentioned, sexual promiscuity talked about openly with teens (not stated as morally or biblically wrong), gambling, physical reactions excessive, detailed tongue kiss, expletives