* * * 3/4
When their foster-turned-adoptive mother suddenly dies, four brothers struggle to keep open the doors of her beloved Harlem knitting shop, while dealing with life and love in Harlem.
Jesse Strong is known for two things: his devotion to his adoptive mom, Mama Joy, and his reputation for breaking hearts in Harlem. When Mama Joy unexpectedly passes away, he and his brothers have different plans on what to do with Strong Knits, their neighborhood knitting store: Jesse wants to keep the store open; his brothers want to shut it down.
Jesse makes an impassioned plea to Kerry Fuller, his childhood friend who has had a crush on him her entire life, to help him figure out how to run the business. Kerry agrees to help him reinvent the store and show him the knitty-gritty of the business, but the more time they spend together, the more the chemistry builds. Kerry, knowing Jesse’s history, doesn’t believe this relationship will exist longer than one can knit one, purl one. But Jesse is determined to prove to her that he can be the man for her—after all, real men knit.
Source: advance e-galley provided in exchange for an honest review
Mama Joy's death is a sudden and unexpected loss to her four sons and the tight-knit Harlem community they live in. Her store, Strong Knits, has been an institution providing not only beautiful ware for knitters to buy but also a haven for like-minded folk and anyone looking for a place to belong. Nobody knows that more than Jesse and Kerry.
Jesse was one of Mama Joy's four adopted sons and this has been his only family. Even though he's recently been adrift with regards to his personal life, Mama Joy never made him feel unloved. While his brothers may view the future of the shop differently, Jesse firmly believes that he can carry on Mama Joy's legacy and make the store successful. All he needs is a little help and for someone who believes in him. Enter Kerry, who's known the Mama Joy and the boys for years. She feels the loss as much as they do and wants very much to keep Strong Knits going. She offers to help Jesse whip the store into shape and show him what she learned from working with his mother.
I liked the setting of a knitting store and come on, four men who inherit it as part of their family's legacy? That's an intriguing concept. It obviously challenges the concept of gender roles with these four guys who grew up learning how to knit. They're self-assured young men with different careers, except for Jesse. But it's okay that he hasn't quite figured himself out yet because that's what he's doing now. He's filled his time with distractions, like the endless women that he's hooked up with. Now he has to prove that he can handle responsibility and make good choices. This is about keeping the store in business as it is about his own direction. Kerry has seen the parade of women and can only eyeroll at him though it never stopped her from falling for his charm. She offers to stay on to help while putting a pause on her own career ambitions.
I have to say that I was excited about how Jesse and Kerry would save the store but there didn't seem to be much time spent on that aside from vague references and ideas scattered throughout the story. I really wanted to see more of their business ideas to get a tangible picture in my mind. That was the book's major pull for me, initially. Instead, a lot of time was spent on Jesse's missteps with the women in his past and facing down his brothers when they became skeptical of his plans. Between those two subplots I was more interested in him strengthening his bond with his brothers. There was plenty of longing going on between Kerry and Jesse that took its time to come to fruition.
While I would've preferred a more streamlined plot that focused more on the store and the artistry of knitting as Jesse and Kerry gradually fell in love, Real Men Knit is still an interesting read and I'm glad I've finally read my first Kwana Jackson book!
~ Bel
Wednesday, May 20, 2020
Monday, May 18, 2020
Beach Read
* * * *
A romance writer who no longer believes in love and a literary writer stuck in a rut engage in a summer-long challenge that may just upend everything they believe about happily ever afters.
Augustus Everett is an acclaimed author of literary fiction. January Andrews writes bestselling romance. When she pens a happily ever after, he kills off his entire cast.
They're polar opposites.
In fact, the only thing they have in common is that for the next three months, they're living in neighboring beach houses, broke, and bogged down with writer's block.
Until, one hazy evening, one thing leads to another and they strike a deal designed to force them out of their creative ruts: Augustus will spend the summer writing something happy, and January will pen the next Great American Novel. She'll take him on field trips worthy of any rom-com montage, and he'll take her to interview surviving members of a backwoods death cult (obviously). Everyone will finish a book and no one will fall in love. Really.
Source: advance e-galley provided in exchange for an honest review
I was expecting a whimsical enemies-to-lovers rom-com but Beach Read turned out to be a multi-layered story with interesting subplots, too.
January's loss after her father's death is compounded by a family secret that comes to light. Unable to accept it or face her mother, she escapes to her father's beach house only to find that her nemesis from college, Gus Everett lives next door. Gus is also a successful novelist and they're both coincidentally suffering from writer's block. In an unusual move, they agree to call a truce and help each other overcome their writing slump by learning about the other's preferred genre. As they become closer, they start to open up and face the many truths they've been fighting so hard to avoid.
I enjoyed this novel immensely. There was humour, heartbreak, forgiveness and redemption. I thought it was slightly slow burn and I liked the pace at which January and Gus' friendship evolved into something deeper. I admired how their love scenes were written as well. They were sensual and it did feel like their vulnerabilities were on full display, that those emotionally intimate moments truly meant something more than just physical. Reading about how they worked to come out of their writer's block was also fascinating. I think where Beach Read triumphs is with their respective story arcs. They'd been contending with extremely personal and sensitive matters, some of which had affected their psyches so deeply. They just needed to be with the right person in whom they could trust, who would stand by them through their emotional journeys. Henry succeeded in not only how she approached them but in making me care equally about January and Gus.
Beach Read was smart and delightful even during the harder moments but everything about it felt so authentic. It will be added to my re-read pile, for sure!
~ Bel
A romance writer who no longer believes in love and a literary writer stuck in a rut engage in a summer-long challenge that may just upend everything they believe about happily ever afters.
Augustus Everett is an acclaimed author of literary fiction. January Andrews writes bestselling romance. When she pens a happily ever after, he kills off his entire cast.
They're polar opposites.
In fact, the only thing they have in common is that for the next three months, they're living in neighboring beach houses, broke, and bogged down with writer's block.
Until, one hazy evening, one thing leads to another and they strike a deal designed to force them out of their creative ruts: Augustus will spend the summer writing something happy, and January will pen the next Great American Novel. She'll take him on field trips worthy of any rom-com montage, and he'll take her to interview surviving members of a backwoods death cult (obviously). Everyone will finish a book and no one will fall in love. Really.
Source: advance e-galley provided in exchange for an honest review
I was expecting a whimsical enemies-to-lovers rom-com but Beach Read turned out to be a multi-layered story with interesting subplots, too.
January's loss after her father's death is compounded by a family secret that comes to light. Unable to accept it or face her mother, she escapes to her father's beach house only to find that her nemesis from college, Gus Everett lives next door. Gus is also a successful novelist and they're both coincidentally suffering from writer's block. In an unusual move, they agree to call a truce and help each other overcome their writing slump by learning about the other's preferred genre. As they become closer, they start to open up and face the many truths they've been fighting so hard to avoid.
I enjoyed this novel immensely. There was humour, heartbreak, forgiveness and redemption. I thought it was slightly slow burn and I liked the pace at which January and Gus' friendship evolved into something deeper. I admired how their love scenes were written as well. They were sensual and it did feel like their vulnerabilities were on full display, that those emotionally intimate moments truly meant something more than just physical. Reading about how they worked to come out of their writer's block was also fascinating. I think where Beach Read triumphs is with their respective story arcs. They'd been contending with extremely personal and sensitive matters, some of which had affected their psyches so deeply. They just needed to be with the right person in whom they could trust, who would stand by them through their emotional journeys. Henry succeeded in not only how she approached them but in making me care equally about January and Gus.
Beach Read was smart and delightful even during the harder moments but everything about it felt so authentic. It will be added to my re-read pile, for sure!
~ Bel
Wednesday, May 13, 2020
Sure Shot Review Tour
* * * 3/4
A new stand-alone hockey romance from USA Today bestseller Sarina Bowen.
On the eve of her thirtieth birthday, sports agent Bess Beringer is ready to make some changes. Armed with a five-year plan—indexed and color coded—she’ll tackle her personal life with the same zeal that she brings to her successful agency.
A big, tall, ripped hunk of hockey player who’s just been traded to the Brooklyn Bruisers is not a part of that plan. Mark “Tank” Tankiewicz has a lot of baggage. He’s a ride-or-die loner with a bad reputation. He’s on the rebound. He’s also the sexiest thing on two legs, and for some crazy reason it’s Bess that he wants.
She knows better. But then she falls stupid in love with him anyway. And for a while it seems like maybe he’ll do the same.
Until she asks him for the one thing he can never give her…
Source: advance e-galled provided in exchange for an honest review
Tank and Bess are at two drastically different stages in their lives. Tank's coming off a divorce, relocated to Brooklyn after being traded from Dallas, and dodging all the rumors surrounding his failed marriage and clashes with former teammates. Bess is just turning 30 and is a successful sports agent who has now branched out to start up her own agency. After years of putting her career first, she's ready for the next phase - meet a great guy with whom she can have a future. Tank is not that guy right now. Right now what they have is great spine-tingling, rock-their-worlds chemistry in the sheets and that's as far as it'll go. That's all Tank can offer and Bess knows there's no future there. Even though they know this they still keep circling back to each other. Years might have passed since their original interlude and brief hookup but there still remains this effortless companionship and ease when they're together. It's like they understand what they need in that moment, and that's comfort and the need to feel wanted.
They really do have great chemistry and Tank's maturity since they first met when he was 23 shows. Bess has also grown from that starry-eyed youngster she was to become a determined, successful woman in a male-dominant industry. As older and wiser versions of themselves, they bring more to the relationship that they appreciate about each other. I was with the story up until it kind of veered off in a different direction for me. I'll have to delve into a bit of spoilery in order to explain ...
Like I said, the story worked for me when Tank and Bess hit it off again. He was getting used to his new life and she was kicking butt at her job. What threw me off was that all of a sudden Bess wanted kids when they'd only just reached the decision to become official. It was mentioned at the beginning of the story that she had put a plan together for her life but - and herein lies my problem - there was absolutely no inkling about this particular detail until she dropped that bombshell on Tank. I can't help wondering if I missed something earlier because apparently it was something she had wanted for a while but I don't think I came across a hint of it in her POV prior to that revelation. When they realized that their individual goals for their future didn't mesh, it made sense that they'd part ways. The the next thing you know, they got back together a month later with that "having children" elephant still in the room (and she had been researching her options while they'd been apart). Tank explained what he was feeling emotionally and Bess finally understood where he was coming from, and it seemed like they were going to take their time. Instead, things seemed to move even faster.
I guess I felt I was suddenly reading a different book with completely different priorities that sprung up overnight. Maybe if there was a physical section break with a "Part 2" that happened a few months (or even a year) later that would've allowed for more time and introspection rather than just the one month pause, then I would've felt it a more organic progression in their relationship. Tank's emotional baggage about children seemed to be glossed over too easily by Bess' idea of a compromise. I'm all for happily ever afters but the second half of the book fell into place way too suddenly for me.
My reservations aside, I was still won over by the tight-knit Bruisers hockey family that provided laughs and what felt like a massive group hug. There's always joy and guaranteed ridiculousness when they're around, so you're hard pressed to not love them. Although aspects of the story confused me, I still liked Bess and Tank, and had fun reading Sure Shot. I know that a lot of fans will be excited for this!
Bel
Monday, May 11, 2020
Gilded Ruins Release Week Blitz
I am so
excited that GILDED RUINS by Chantal
Gadoury is available now and that I get to share the news!
If you
haven’t yet heard about this wonderful book by Author Chantal Gadoury, be sure
to check out all the details below.
This blitz
also includes a giveaway for a $10 Amazon GC courtesy of Rockstar Book Tours & Chantal.
So if you’d like a chance to win, check out the giveaway info below.
About The Book:
Title: GILDED
RUINS (Blinding Night #2)
Author: Chantal
Gadoury
Pub. Date: May
12, 2021
Publisher: The
Parliament House
Formats: Paperback,
eBook
Pages: 295
The Story
Continues. . .
Summer and
Darce are summoned by the order of Zeus himself to travel to the home of the
Gods: Mount Olympus, where they're to face even more ancient Gods and
Goddesses.
Summer
braces to confront her mother again, illuminating secrets about the truth of her
tragic pasts, while also persuading Zeus to allow her to stay with the God of
the Underworld, her true love - Darce.
Aboard
Poseidon's luxury yacht, Summer meets her mythological family, while also
uncovering what exactly happened to her past lives - and the true roles her
mother and Darce played.
When Darce
and Summer suddenly find themselves separated, Summer must find her inner power
and unite them together, before her mortal time runs out.
About Book 1:
Title: BLINDING
NIGHT (Blinding Night #1)
Author: Chantal
Gadoury
Pub. Date: October
2, 2018
Publisher: The
Parliament House
Formats: Paperback,
eBook, audiobook
Pages: 289
What if you were the missing piece in
one of the world’s most epic legends?
Despite being an art history student, Summer isn’t thrilled to be stuck with her archeologist family all summer in Greece. While the rest of her college friends are posting a million selfies by the pool together, Summer is stuck alone, trying to entertain herself alone in a place where she doesn’t even speak the language.
Upon her arrival to Greece, strange dreams and even stranger shadows seem to haunt Summer, leaving her to ponder the meaning of pomegranate seeds and twisted, darkened faces.
Suddenly, her stay abroad leads to tragic twists, leaving Summer in the arms of a dark stranger, who claims to be the god, Hades, whom she feels like she knows from another life. In a whirlwind through the busy streets of Athens, Summer is seduced to the lowest point of Greece where Hades’ lair awaits…the Underworld. Determined to find out who she is and where she belongs in an age-old myth, Summer joins Hades to discover that the secrets about her past life are beyond anything she could have ever imagined.
Book Trailer:
Excerpt:
“Have you heard the news?” Hermes asked as he came to pause in front of Darce.
“There’s been a slight change of plans.”
“Change?” Darce asked, brow arched. He crossed his arms against his chest and shook his head. “What do you mean?”
“Do we get to go home?” I asked, doing what I could to keep the hope from my tone. Hermes chuckled and shook his head as he leaned lazily against the doorframe.
“We’ve been invited to the Mediterranean Sea.”
I didn’t miss the dark look Darce gave Hermes.
“The Mediterranean Sea?” I asked, wrinkling my nose. “What about—”
“Zeus thought it would be better for everyone to meet on more neutral ground.”
“So he chose the sea?” Darce snorted, shaking his head. “Sounds more like he couldn’t resist an invitation to Poseidon’s superyacht.”
“Wait a second,” I asked, looking skeptically between the two of them.
“Poseidon has a superyacht?”
The irony hadn’t been lost on me.
“Yes,” Hermes said, flashing me a smile. “It’s a beautiful ship. There are several amenities I’m sure you’ll enjoy your time aboard. The hot tub is one of my personal favorite places there.”
“I don’t think so,” Darce said, the muscles in his jaw tightening. “We’re not going.”
Darce pushed himself from the wall and grabbed my hand.
“But—” I started, feeling unsure. Was it so easy to just turn around and leave? Could we really go home? Just as Darce turned on his heel, and started towards the door, Hermes cleared his throat.”
“You know you have very little choice in this, my Lord. You know if you snub your brother, he’ll not resist punishing you, and her too.”
His words caused Darce to pause. Darce turned to look to Hermes over his shoulder.
“He gave me no indication that we’d be meeting out at sea. It was agreed that I would go to Mount Olympus. He demanded that she go there. . .” Darce tried to argue.
“Certainly you do not oppose a more neutral place-”
“It’s hardly neutral, Hermes. You know that,” Darce hissed. “It’s a show. All of this is a show.” I could hear the growl in his voice as he slid his hands to his waist.
“He obviously intends to make this meeting into nothing but a grand, dramatic performance.”
Hermes seemed unbothered by Darce’s outrage. “I’m just the messenger.”
About Chantal:
Chantal
Gadoury is an Amazon Best Selling Author who is originally from the countryside
of Muncy, PA. Chantal likes anything Disney, plays a mean game of Disney
trivia, enjoys painting and has a interest in British History. Chantal first
started writing stories at the age of seven and continues that love of writing
today. As a recent college graduate from Susquehanna University, with a degree
in Creative Writing, writing novels is a dream come true.
Website | Twitter | Facebook | Intstagram |
Pinterest | Goodreads | Amazon Page
Giveaway Details:
1 winner will receive a $10 Amazon GC, International.
Ends May 19, 2020. Midnight EST.
Love Under Quarantine Blog Tour
Love Under Quarantine, an all-new feel good strangers-to-lovers romance about finding love in the most unexpected ways from New York Times bestselling authors Kylie Scott and Audrey Carlan, is out now!
While the world is ravaged by a global pandemic, hotshot NFL running back Evan Sparks is locked in his own personal hell. With a career-ending scandal on his back, Evan hides out in his best friend’s empty San Francisco home, the full city shutdown locking him in a lonely twenty-story apartment in the sky.
Romance writer Sadie Walsh is having the worst case of writer’s block ever…until the incredible, muscular stranger staying next door gets her muse going strong. The pair of loners, never expecting to find a friend in all the madness, meet each day out on their balconies like a modern-day Romeo and Juliet.
Each new day brings unique challenges for the pair as they navigate the unknown and find solace together. They quickly figure out that as long as they have one another, they can handle anything.
Even falling in love under quarantine.
***
Writing together for the first time, New York Times bestselling authors Kylie Scott and Audrey Carlan team up to tell a story that not only is a beautiful escape during a trying time, but a true lesson on the power of humanity’s ability to survive. Through a sexy, hopeful, strangers-to-lovers romance, the authors prove with love, trust, and faith, we can conquer anything.
Download your copy today or read for FREE in Kindle Unlimited!
+ + + Excerpt + + +
SADIE
Okay, reposition feet hip-distance apart and centered on the mat. Inhale and let it all go on the exhale. I look over the balcony across the barren city and try to find perspective. What did the teacher say? Set your intention? My intention is to maintain a modicum of good health and to not go insane during self-isolation. Fingers crossed on both fronts. Getting some work done wouldn’t be a bad idea either.
“They locked down the fucking city, man!” The voice blocks me from finding my zen spot. Some big blond dude is pacing back and forth in the neighboring apartment. Guess we’ve all got to get our exercise one way or another. A nice quiet doctor owns the place, but he’s overseas right now. No idea who this guy is. The new cat sitter, maybe? If so, I hope Gloria housetrains him quickly because all of this shouty behavior is not okay. Not if I have to share a wall with him for the next few weeks.
My new neighbor’s voice lowers to a more tolerable level and I take a deep, calming breath before moving into my next pose. Much better. Despite having questionable balance and being new to this whole yoga thing, I’m not doing too badly. It’s weird how quiet the city is with everything on lockdown. Peaceful, almost.
“Two weeks! I’ll be stuck here for two weeks!” he rants once more.
Ugh.
Due to the architect’s penchant for floor to ceiling windows—perfect for letting in the light—I have quite the view of my new neighbor’s performance. Much angst. Such woe. Like we’re not all going to go stir crazy during lock in. Even if it has only just started. I for one can’t wait to see how many divorces and break-ups this causes. Call it morbid curiosity. Though, being a romance writer, my mind would be better served dwelling on the possibilities for true love in this situation.
A random casual hook-up turning into so much more due to weeks of forced interaction? Roommates bonding over newly revealed shared interests? Nuh. Roommates entering into a sex pact to stave off boredom! Now that could work. Broken beds and broken hearts. That’s how to get things done. With the requisite happy ever after at the end, of course.
“Excuse me!” he shouts, shoving a frustrated hand through his head of thick, wavy, dark blond hair. New phone call, I think. After all, you can’t yell at the same person all day long. How tedious would that be?
Call me distractible, but watching him is actually a hell of a lot more interesting than perfecting my Downward Dog or doing yet another inventory of my pantry. Damn Oreos. I could have sworn I had another package. Day one and I’m already out of my favorite snack. Just bring on the apocalypse already. Without Oreos my life is already functionally over.
“Are you kidding me!” The man sure has a set of lungs on him. Unfortunately, at this point, he about-faces and strides back into the apartment. Still yelling, of course, though I can’t quite make out what he’s saying.
On the plus side, in those blue jeans, his ass is a thing of wonder. Honest to God. In less pandemic-y times, I’d charge my friends a bottle of wine to come over and witness the beauty of that thing. So tight. So nice. I lick my lips. Impressively broad shoulders beneath his T-shirt too. When he paces back to the front of the apartment, I’m presented with a strong jawline, high forehead, and a nose that could be slightly crooked. At least, it will be in the book. Readers dig that shit. The hint of a complicated past with a dash of violence thrown in for good measure. Ideally, he’d have broken it defending a small child or rescuing puppies. A combination of the two, perhaps?
Yes, it’s a definite. Apart from the anger management issues, this guy is officially hot stuff. Not that I’m after an actual love interest. Just inspiration for the hero of my next book.
Which is when it hits me…big buff dude reveals surprisingly sensitive side to sexy single introverted neighbor during quarantine. Hmm. It has possibilities. I stop procrastinating and move onto the next pose, arms out in a T, legs wide, and a slow bend at the waist. I exhale, pondering the plot idea along with the thickness of his thighs. The way the denim lovingly embraces every inch of his musculature. It’s like it’s on a loop playing over and over in my head. Okay, maybe I’m a little sex starved. He can feature in my masturbatory fantasies as well. After all, he’s that kind of can-do, helpful guy. Or at least, he is in my mind. And that’s where the man will stay. At a safe and appropriate distance. For both the virus and my heart.
+ + + Meet the Authors + + +
About Kylie Scott
Kylie is a New York Times and USA Today best-selling author. She was voted Australian Romance Writer of the year, 2013, 2014 & 2018, by the Australian Romance Writer’s Association and her books have been translated into eleven different languages. She is a long time fan of romance, rock music, and B-grade horror films. Based in Queensland, Australia with her two children and husband, she reads, writes and never dithers around on the internet.
Connect with Kylie
About Audrey Carlan
Audrey Carlan is a #1 New York Times and International bestselling author. Her titles have appeared on USA Today and the Wall Street Journal. Audrey writes wicked hot love stories that have been translated in over thirty different languages across the globe. She is best known for the world-wide bestselling series Calendar Girl and Trinity.
She lives in the California Valley where she enjoys her two children and the love of her life. When she's not writing, you can find her teaching yoga, sipping wine with her "soul sisters," or with her nose stuck in a steamy romance novel.
+ + + Review + + +
It's so cliche to say it now but these are strange times and we're doing everything we can to make it through each day without losing our minds. So we avid readers are resorting to books to find comfort in some of our favourite authors.
Love Under Quarantine wasn't the escape I thought it'd be because there are constant reminders about life under quarantine. Some of the information about COVID19 borders between informative and preachy now but I had to keep it mind that the story itself is set during the first few days of lockdowns around the country so it's all just starting. As for Evan and Sadie, I didn't feel any chemistry between them. Maybe because on one hand, it's forced proximity (which I'm normally a fan of) but in this case there's no choice but to stay put so they're stuck with each other. On the other hand, it's because they're stuck together, stranded on their respective balconies that they're getting to know each other. They're forging a real friendship while life has grounded to a halt. By his own admission, Evan admits Sadie's not the his usual type (his usual being fake boobs, fake tan, fake hair colour). Sadie is the opposite of that. While he's making a real friend, I just didn't feel a spark between them. They get along fine chatting out on the balcony and having interesting conversations before the relationship evolves into straight up creative sexy times.
Then are a number of subplots taking place. One, is the scandal that has Evan looking like a steroid-abusing drug dealer which has him defending his innocence and his multi-million dollar career and contract. So he's putting some energy into uncovering who has it out for him. Two, Sadie's a romance author who needs new inspiration for her latest book and guess who has become her muse? Then there's Sadie's strained relationship with her parents who insist she get back together with her selfish boyfriend. Fair warning: there's a COVID19-related death of a minor character that comes out of the blue. The timing of it in the story was so off that it left a bad taste for me.
I'm unfamiliar with Audrey Carlan's previous work so I can't speak to her part in this but this wasn't my favourite from Kylie Scott. She's a terrific writer - an auto-buy for me - and I usually love her snark and wit but I was not into this at all. It felt like the the goal was to incorporate every hot button issue about the quarantine AND throw in a romance AND a bit of a mystery that the story became redundant and disjointed. As much as I wanted to love this book, it didn't work for me.
~ Bel
(Source: an e-galley was provided in exchange for an honest review)
~ Bel
(Source: an e-galley was provided in exchange for an honest review)
Tuesday, May 5, 2020
The Secrets of Love Story Bridge Blog Tour
+ + Book Summary + +
Fredrik Backman meets The Cactus in THE SECRETS OF LOVE STORY BRIDGE (Park Row Books; April 28, 2020; $25.99 US/$32.50 CAN), in which a cynical single father has a surprise encounter on the famous love lock bridge, sparking a journey of self-discovery that may lead him to a second chance at love.
Single father Mitchell Fisher hates all things romance. He enjoys his job removing padlocks fastened to the famous "love lock" bridges of Upchester city. Only his young daughter, Poppy, knows that behind his disciplined veneer, Mitchell grieves the loss of her mother, Anita.
One fateful day, working on the bridge, Mitchell courageously rescues a woman who falls into the river. He’s surprised to feel a connection to her, but the woman disappears before he learns her name. To Mitchell’s shock, a video of the rescue goes viral, hailing him as "The Hero on the Bridge." He’s soon notified by the mysterious woman’s sister, Liza, that she has been missing for over a year. However, the only clue to where the woman could have gone is the engraved padlock she left on the bridge.
Mitchell finds himself swept up in Liza’s quest to find her lost sister. Along the way, with help from a sparkling cast of characters, Mitchell’s heart gradually unlocks, and he discovers new beginnings can be found in the unlikeliest places...
+ + Buy Links + +
+ + Review + +
* * * *
The Secrets of Love Story Bridge tugged at my heart. It's the kind of story that's already set up to have you feel a special sense of protectiveness and care for the protagonist. Mitchell is a single dad who's lost his belief in love and romance since his partner, Anita died. Now caring for their nine year-old daughter, Mitchell has become a more practical and regimented person, looking for ways to occupy all the minutes of the day so that there's no room to think about her passing. He left a promising but time-consuming career as an architect to work for his local council where he removes padlocks on bridges placed there by couples who are hopelessly in love or people remembering their loved ones. It's decidedly less challenging and less money but it gives him the opportunity to focus on being a dad. He's going about his work one morning when he notices a woman attach a padlock to the bridge - much to Mitchell's dismay - but there's something alluring about her. As he watches her, he sees her fall off the bridge and he quickly jumps in after her. Once she's safe, they part ways though fate isn't done with them yet. In an unexpected coincidence it turns out the mysterious woman is connected to someone he knows. This person enlists Mitchell's help in finding her with what little information they can gleam from the incident and the publicity it has garnered. Now Mitchell, who has only craved the quiet, ordered life with his daughter, is thrust into another kind of life where he interacts with people again, and he can't seem to escape being the good guy or be the recipient of people's good intentions.
The Secrets of Love Story Bridge tugged at my heart. It's the kind of story that's already set up to have you feel a special sense of protectiveness and care for the protagonist. Mitchell is a single dad who's lost his belief in love and romance since his partner, Anita died. Now caring for their nine year-old daughter, Mitchell has become a more practical and regimented person, looking for ways to occupy all the minutes of the day so that there's no room to think about her passing. He left a promising but time-consuming career as an architect to work for his local council where he removes padlocks on bridges placed there by couples who are hopelessly in love or people remembering their loved ones. It's decidedly less challenging and less money but it gives him the opportunity to focus on being a dad. He's going about his work one morning when he notices a woman attach a padlock to the bridge - much to Mitchell's dismay - but there's something alluring about her. As he watches her, he sees her fall off the bridge and he quickly jumps in after her. Once she's safe, they part ways though fate isn't done with them yet. In an unexpected coincidence it turns out the mysterious woman is connected to someone he knows. This person enlists Mitchell's help in finding her with what little information they can gleam from the incident and the publicity it has garnered. Now Mitchell, who has only craved the quiet, ordered life with his daughter, is thrust into another kind of life where he interacts with people again, and he can't seem to escape being the good guy or be the recipient of people's good intentions.
I have noticed the comparisons to Fredrik Backman's A Man Called Ove and I can see why. Much like Ove, Mitchell just wants to go about his life without having to deal with others but never the less gets caught up in it all. Since he's forced to interact with others, his introverted lifestyle has to make room for others now. It's the subtle way that these new interactions infiltrate his life and open him up again that makes this story so powerful. Patrick manages a delicate balancing act between demonstrating Mitchell's grief which gradually shifts towards slight trepidation befor moving on and finally accepting that there's still much to be a part of and celebrate in his life.
I liked the tender way Mitchell's story is told. There's something calming, kind of matter-of-fact about it that made me feel like I was invited into Mitchell's world. Those moments of grief were done tenderly. The moments of levity saw him reconnecting with the past and also welcoming new beginnings. I loved Patrick's other novel, The Curious Charms of Arthur Pepper, and much like that The Secret of Love Story Bridge is insightful, uplifting and heartfelt.
~ Bel
I liked the tender way Mitchell's story is told. There's something calming, kind of matter-of-fact about it that made me feel like I was invited into Mitchell's world. Those moments of grief were done tenderly. The moments of levity saw him reconnecting with the past and also welcoming new beginnings. I loved Patrick's other novel, The Curious Charms of Arthur Pepper, and much like that The Secret of Love Story Bridge is insightful, uplifting and heartfelt.
~ Bel
+ + Author Bio + +
Phaedra Patrick is the author of The Library of Lost and Found, Rise and Shine, Benedict Stone and The Curious Charms of Arthur Pepper, which has been published in over twenty countries around the world. She studied art and marketing, and has worked as a stained-glass artist, film festival organizer and communications manager. An award-winning short story writer, she now writes full-time. She lives in Saddleworth, UK, with her husband and son.
+ + Excerpt + +
The Lilac
Envelope
The night
before
As he did often, over the past three years, Mitchell Fisher wrote
a letter he would never send.
He sat up in bed at midnight and kicked off his sheets. Even
though all the internal doors in his apartment were open, the sticky July heat
still felt like a shroud clinging to his body. His nine-year-old daughter Poppy
thrashed restlessly in her sleep, in the bedroom opposite.
Mitchell turned on his bedside lamp, squinting against the yellow
light, and took out a pad of Basildon Bond notepaper from underneath his bed.
He always used a fountain pen to write—old-fashioned he supposed, but he was a
man who valued things that were well-constructed and long-lasting.
Mitchell tapped the pen against his bottom lip. He knew what he
wanted to say, but by the time his words of sorrow and regret travelled from
his brain to his fingertips, they were only fragments of what he longed to
express.
As he started to write, the sound of the metal nib scratching
against paper helped him block out the city street noise that hummed below his
apartment.
Dearest Anita
Another
letter from me. Everything here is fine, ticking along. Poppy is doing well.
The school holidays start soon and I thought she’d be more excited. It’s
probably because you’re not here to enjoy them with us.
I’ve
taken two weeks off work to spend with her, and have a full itinerary planned
for us—badminton, tennis, library visits, cooking, walking, the park, swimming,
museums, cooking, a tour of the city bridges, and more. It will keep us busy.
Keep our minds off you.
You’ll be
amazed how much she’s grown, must be almost your height by now. I tell her how
proud I am of her, but it always means more coming from you.
Mitchell paused, resting his hand against the pad of paper. He had
to tell her how he felt.
Every
time I look at our daughter, I think of you. I wish I could hold you again, and
tell you I’m truly sorry.
Yours, always
Mitchell x
He read his words, always dissatisfied with them, never able to
convey the magnitude of grief and guilt he felt. After folding the piece of
paper once, he sealed it into a crisp, cream envelope, then squeezed it into
the almost-full drawer of his nightstand, amongst all the other letters he’d
written. His eyes fell upon the slim lilac envelope he kept on top, the one
addressed to him from Anita, that he’d not yet been able to bring himself to
open.
Taking that envelope out, he held it under his nose and inhaled.
There was still a slight scent of her on the paper, he thought, of violet soap.
His finger followed the angle of the gummed flap and then stopped. He closed
his eyes and willed himself to open the letter, but his fingernails dented
crescents into the paper.
Once more, he placed it back into his drawer.
Mitchell lay down and hugged himself, imagining Anita’s arms were
wrapped around him. But, when he closed his eyes, the words from all the
letters weighed down upon him like a bulldozer. As he turned and tried to
sleep, he pulled the pillow over his head to force them away.
1. A Locked
Heart
The lovers who attached their padlocks to the bridges of Upchester
might see it as a fun or romantic gesture but, to Mitchell, it was an act of
vandalism.
It was the hottest year on record in the city and the morning sun
was already beating down on the back of his neck. His biceps flexed as he
methodically opened and squeezed his bolt cutters shut, cutting the padlocks
off the cast-iron filigree panels of the old Victorian bridge, one by
one.
Since local boyband Word Up filmed the video for their
international smash hit “Lock Me Up with Your Love” on this bridge, thousands
of people were flocking to the small city in the North West of England. They
brought and attached locks marked with initials, names, messages, to
demonstrate their love for the band and each other, on the city’s five
bridges.
Large red and white signs that read no padlocks studded the pavement. But as far as Mitchell
could see, the locks still hung on the railings like bees swarming across
frames of honeycomb. The constant reminder of love surrounding him, other
people’s, made him feel like he was fighting for breath.
As he cut off the locks, he wanted to yell, ‘Why can’t you just
keep your feelings to yourselves?’
After several hours of hard work, Mitchell’s trail of broken locks
glinted on the pavement like a metal snake. He stopped for a moment and
narrowed his eyes as a young couple strolled toward him. The woman glided in a
white floaty dress and tan cowboy boots. The man wore shorts and had the
physique of an American football player. With his experience of carrying out
maintenance across the city’s public areas, Mitchell instinctively knew they
were up to something.
After breaking away from his girlfriend, the man walked to the
side of the bridge while nonchalantly pulling out a large silver padlock from
his pocket.
Mitchell tightened his grip on his cutters. He was once so easy
and in love with Anita, but rules were rules. ‘Excuse me,’ he called out. ‘You
can’t hang that lock.’
The man frowned and crossed his bulging arms. ‘Oh yeah? And who’s
going to stop me?’
Mitchell had the sinewy physique of a sprinter. He was angular all
over with dark hair and eyes, and a handsome dorsal hump on his nose. ‘I am,’
he said and put his cutters down on the pavement. He held out his hand for the
lock. ‘It’s my job to clear the bridges. You could get a fine.’
Anger flashed across the blond man’s face and he batted Mitchell’s
hand away, swiping off his work glove. Mitchell watched as it tumbled down into
the river below. Sometimes the water flowed prettily, but today it gushed and
gurgled, a bruise-grey hue. A young man had drowned here in a strong current
last summer.
The man’s girlfriend wrapped her arms around her boyfriend’s waist
and tugged him away. ‘Come on. Leave him alone.’ She cast Mitchell an
apologetic smile. ‘Sorry, but we’re so in love. It took us two hours and
three buses to get here. We’ll be working miles away from each other
soon. Please let us do this.’
The man looked into her eyes and softened. ‘Yeah, um, sorry,
mate,’ he said sheepishly. ‘The heat got the better of me. All we want to do is
fasten our lock.’
Mitchell gestured at the sign again. ‘Just think about what you’re
doing, guys,’ he said with a weary sigh. ‘Padlocks are just cheap chunks of
metal and they’re weighing down the bridges. Can’t you get a nice ring or
tattoo instead? Or write letters to each other? There are better ways to say I
lov– Well, you know. . .’
The man and the woman shared an incredulous look.
‘Whatever,’ the man glowered, and he shoved his padlock back into
the pocket of his shorts. ‘We’ll go to another bridge instead.’
‘I work on those too . . .’
The couple laughed at him and sauntered away.
Mitchell rubbed his nose. He knew his job wasn’t a glamorous one.
It wasn’t the one in architecture he’d studied hard and trained for. However,
it meant he could pay the rent on his apartment and buy Poppy hot lunch at
school each day. Whatever daily hassle he put up with, he needed the work.
His workmate Barry had watched the incident from the other side of
the road. Sweat circled under his arms and his forehead shone like a mirror as
he crossed over. ‘The padlocks keep multiplying,’ he groaned.
‘We need to keep on going.’
‘But it’s too damn hot.’ Barry undid a button on his polo shirt,
showing off unruly chest curls that matched the ones on his head. ‘It’s a
violation of our human rights, and no one can tell if we cut off twenty or two
hundred.’
Mitchell held his hand up against the glare of the sun. ‘We can
tell, and Russ wants the bridges cleared in time for the city centenary
celebrations.’
Barry rolled his eyes. ‘There’s only three weeks to go until then.
Our boss should come down here and get his hands dirty, too. At least join me
for a pint after work.’
Mitchell’s mouth felt parched, and he suddenly longed for an
ice-cold beer. A vision of peeling off his polo-shirt and socks and relaxing in
a beer garden appeared like a dreamy mirage in his head.
However, he had to pick Poppy up from the after-school club to
take her for a guitar lesson, an additional one to her music class in school.
Her headteacher, Miss Heathcliff, was a stickler for the school closing
promptly at 5.30pm, and it was a rush to get there on time. He lowered his eyes
and said, ‘I’d love to, but I have to dash.’
Then he selected his next padlock to attack.
Excerpted from The Secrets of Love Story Bridge
by Phaedra Patrick, Copyright © 2020 by Phaedra
Patrick.
Published by Park Row Books
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