Daphne always loved the way Peter told their story.
That is until it became the prologue to his actual love story with his childhood bestie, Petra.
Which is how Daphne ends up rooming with her total opposite and the only person who could possibly understand her predicament: Petra's ex, Miles.
As expected, it’s not a match made in heaven – that is until one night, while tossing back tequilas, they form a plan.
And if it involves posting deliberately misleading photos of their adventures together, well, who could blame them?
But it’s all just for show, of course, because there’s no way Daphne would actually start her new chapter by falling in love with her ex-fiancé’s new fiancée’s ex . . . right?
Review: This is actually my first novel from Emily Henry and, having just finished listening to the audiobook and enjoyed the story, I’m not sure why. I think I may just be going back through some of her earlier books soon.
This story tells of how Daphne came to be flat sharing with Miles and how these people with nothing at all in common developed a relationship. When Daphne was informed by fiancé Peter that he was in love with someone else and gave her a week to leave his house, she was left heartbroken and with nowhere to live. She turned to Miles, whose fiancé, Petra, had been snaffled by Peter, and who, more importantly, had a spare bedroom going begging. Librarian Daphne and bartender Miles couldn’t be more different, but somehow they managed to get along and gradually become friends, plotting revenge against their exes. Soon they began enjoying time together, each showing the other new experiences. Could their unlikely friendship be turning into something more?
I absolutely loved this sometimes humorous, sometimes serious romance, filled with interesting, well-developed characters and surprising situations. The way in which the author brought together two very different people who then slowly began to understand each other was brilliant. I liked the way in which the story was told in relation to Daphne’s plan for leaving the town which she now hated behind. The change in Daphne as she began to realise how much her life had been shaped by her ex was truly heartwarming, as was the way in which Miles gradually opened up to reveal the real person underneath the persona. I recommend this book and hope that others will also enjoy it as an introduction to Emily Henry’s novels.
To order your copy now, just click here!
No comments:
Post a Comment