2.5 stars rounded up.
Plot summary: Josie is a winemaker who wants her own wine label. Her boss hires his inexperienced niece, Mac, as her intern for the busy 'crush' period. They’re immediately horny for each other, but there's frustrations around Mac's inexperience, although she learns quickly. Feelings develop and they all live happily ever after.
If they’re not making wine, they’re drinking wine. Seriously, there is SO MUCH WINE. And then they just casually drive their cars after drinking? I wanted to DNF this early on, ngl. I didn't find it that compelling and I was bored by the constant wine. I even tried drinking wine during it, but it didn't help. It honestly became quite dry - I feel like the learning process for Mac/overall winemaking should've been condensed, or more suited to a visual medium honestly (sometimes I had no idea what was going on). Their lives outside their job were naturally more interesting to me, like Jack's place or Erin and Georgie. I ended up skimming the wine scenes to be honest, but it did become a bit more balanced towards the end.
As a queer person, I love lgbt romance, but this just didn't hit for me. It seems to rely on the grumpy/sunshine trope, except Josie isn't that grumpy, she's just rightfully stressed. There was an initial attraction, Mac getting wet over folding Josie's underwear (it was weird), and 'we work together, we shouldn't date' but I just really didn't _feel_ any of it. I wasn't excited, rooting for them, or warmed by the fluff (but this could also be from the predictability/inevitable happy ending). The 'conflict' around Josie's panic attacks was quite uncomfortable - Mac says she should have therapy and Josie shuts it down (which I don't think is unreasonable or unrealistic) so Mac thinks she's an arsehole and they don't really talk for over a week until Josie has a migraine and Mac demands (again) that she calls a therapist? Idk it was all weird. The first kiss was weird and felt forced. This continued when they then have sex because 'it's just as bad as kissing your intern'(?????) and then declare love(?????!). Aside from the constant mentions of wine, the next most frequent was 'wet panties' (or that kinda wetness in general, including leaving a wet patch on the kitchen countertop), and it was just as grating at best. I did warm to Josie, but it was hard to be invested in the story when it was obviously all gonna be okay.
Other than the dry winemaking, and overuse of certain phrases, I found the writing style a bit basic and forced at times. There was also weird summaries after paragraph breaks or in a new chapter of stuff we've literally just read.
Overall, I just wasn't into any of it, and the overarching plot was predictable. Others have given good reviews, so maybe it just wasn't for me.
Additionally, the change in POV could've been made clearer. It was written in third person but shifted perspectives and at times it was unclear.
AND WHO CUTS UP A POPTART??
Thank you to NetGalley for the ARC.