fatma's Reviews > Book Lovers
Book Lovers
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I was disappointed by Book Lovers, here's a review in point form:
• My biggest issue with this book is that I simply didn't feel strongly about any of it. When I read a romance novel, I need to feel strongly about said romance--it can be a fun, lighthearted romance, or an angsty, hardhitting romance, but regardless of tone, all I want at the end of the day is to feel deeply invested in the characters' relationship. Needless to say, I didn't feel that way about Nora and Charlie. I didn't feel one way or the other about them, really. Their interactions were fine--and frankly, the worst thing aside from outright hating a romance is to think that it was fine. Fine is boring; it's lukewarm; it's forgettable. (Unsurprisingly enough, I've already started to forget this book even though I literally finished it yesterday.)
• As to why I thought the romance was mediocre, there are a lot of reasons. Namely, it wasn't developed slowly enough. There wasn't enough of a buildup, and the buildup is the best part of the romance: the tentativeness, the second-guessing yourself, the realization that you actually like this person, the tension--all of that was missing here. With the exception of their first encounter, Nora and Charlie pretty much immediately hit it off, and, like, good for them, but it's not very interesting for me as a reader to just have all that fun buildup stuff almost entirely skipped over.
• Emily Henry writes some really great banter in this (it's one of the few things I truly loved about this book), but banter does not a good story make, and the overarching structure of the romantic plotline was lacking. It was too vanilla in that it just wasn't dramatic enough: there was very little conflict, or a sense of there being narrative ups and downs. There were inconveniences and half-truths and little misunderstandings, sure, but there was just no underlying sense of actually significant highs and lows in the story (at least with regard to the romantic plotline).
• I feel like the whole time I was reading this, I was waiting for something to impress me--some "wow" moment that would stop me in my tracks--but it just never came. Part of that is the hype--a third Emily Henry romance!!!--and part of that was just my own expectations: I wasn't especially taken with Beach Read, but I loved People We Meet on Vacation--structurally, it's one of the most well executed romances I've ever read--and I thought (or hoped) that Henry's stories were on an upward trajectory. Sadly, this was a major step down for me. It wasn't bad, but it was underwhelming, which ultimately means give it a couple of weeks and I will pretty much have completely forgotten about this book.
• Some additional little gripes: first, the writing is overly sentimental sometimes, especially when Nora is waxing poetic about how much she loves New York and how much of a City Person she is. Like okay, we get it, you love the bodegas and trains or whatever, no need to tell us about it for the umpteenth time.
• Second, as with Beach Read, the fictional novel that Henry makes up for this book--a novel that Nora's author client, Dusty, is in the process of writing--sounds awful. Like it truly sounds so bad, and the fact that the characters talk about it like it's a literary masterpiece that they simply have to get their hands on boggled my mind.
• And third, I found it really annoying how Nora constantly had to babysit Dusty. Nora's workaholic tendencies are a big part of the book, so it was surprising to me that this was never addressed in any way. Nora is fielding phone calls from this lady left and right to coddle her and give her pep talks and make sure she's doing okay and like!!! Sure it's your job to make sure your client feels supported and all, but the way that it's written here makes it sound like Nora is just there to manage Dusty's emotions 24/7. That's not part of your job, Nora !!!!!
• My biggest issue with this book is that I simply didn't feel strongly about any of it. When I read a romance novel, I need to feel strongly about said romance--it can be a fun, lighthearted romance, or an angsty, hardhitting romance, but regardless of tone, all I want at the end of the day is to feel deeply invested in the characters' relationship. Needless to say, I didn't feel that way about Nora and Charlie. I didn't feel one way or the other about them, really. Their interactions were fine--and frankly, the worst thing aside from outright hating a romance is to think that it was fine. Fine is boring; it's lukewarm; it's forgettable. (Unsurprisingly enough, I've already started to forget this book even though I literally finished it yesterday.)
• As to why I thought the romance was mediocre, there are a lot of reasons. Namely, it wasn't developed slowly enough. There wasn't enough of a buildup, and the buildup is the best part of the romance: the tentativeness, the second-guessing yourself, the realization that you actually like this person, the tension--all of that was missing here. With the exception of their first encounter, Nora and Charlie pretty much immediately hit it off, and, like, good for them, but it's not very interesting for me as a reader to just have all that fun buildup stuff almost entirely skipped over.
• Emily Henry writes some really great banter in this (it's one of the few things I truly loved about this book), but banter does not a good story make, and the overarching structure of the romantic plotline was lacking. It was too vanilla in that it just wasn't dramatic enough: there was very little conflict, or a sense of there being narrative ups and downs. There were inconveniences and half-truths and little misunderstandings, sure, but there was just no underlying sense of actually significant highs and lows in the story (at least with regard to the romantic plotline).
• I feel like the whole time I was reading this, I was waiting for something to impress me--some "wow" moment that would stop me in my tracks--but it just never came. Part of that is the hype--a third Emily Henry romance!!!--and part of that was just my own expectations: I wasn't especially taken with Beach Read, but I loved People We Meet on Vacation--structurally, it's one of the most well executed romances I've ever read--and I thought (or hoped) that Henry's stories were on an upward trajectory. Sadly, this was a major step down for me. It wasn't bad, but it was underwhelming, which ultimately means give it a couple of weeks and I will pretty much have completely forgotten about this book.
• Some additional little gripes: first, the writing is overly sentimental sometimes, especially when Nora is waxing poetic about how much she loves New York and how much of a City Person she is. Like okay, we get it, you love the bodegas and trains or whatever, no need to tell us about it for the umpteenth time.
• Second, as with Beach Read, the fictional novel that Henry makes up for this book--a novel that Nora's author client, Dusty, is in the process of writing--sounds awful. Like it truly sounds so bad, and the fact that the characters talk about it like it's a literary masterpiece that they simply have to get their hands on boggled my mind.
• And third, I found it really annoying how Nora constantly had to babysit Dusty. Nora's workaholic tendencies are a big part of the book, so it was surprising to me that this was never addressed in any way. Nora is fielding phone calls from this lady left and right to coddle her and give her pep talks and make sure she's doing okay and like!!! Sure it's your job to make sure your client feels supported and all, but the way that it's written here makes it sound like Nora is just there to manage Dusty's emotions 24/7. That's not part of your job, Nora !!!!!
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Reading Progress
August 3, 2021
– Shelved
August 3, 2021
– Shelved as:
to-read
August 3, 2021
– Shelved as:
romance
August 3, 2021
– Shelved as:
novels-tbr
May 4, 2022
–
Started Reading
May 5, 2022
–
Finished Reading
Comments Showing 1-28 of 28 (28 new)
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by
Fon
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rated it 3 stars
May 04, 2022 11:11PM
my thoughts exactly!!!!
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Yes! Esp abt the underwhelming conflict and nothing exciting going on. I was into it for the first half cause the banter kept me going but the second half just got old. Besides "the conflict" wasn't even really a conflict.
Also Dusty really annoyed me too!! That woman needed to be acquainted with the concept of boundaries.
Also Dusty really annoyed me too!! That woman needed to be acquainted with the concept of boundaries.
AJ wrote: "meaning it was pretty much like any other typical romance novel. wow, that’s a bummer!!"
i love romance novels so my problem wasnt so much that it was like other romance novels but that it just wasnt well executed 🤷♀️
i love romance novels so my problem wasnt so much that it was like other romance novels but that it just wasnt well executed 🤷♀️
anna (ur mom’s version) wrote: "yes!! i love ur review and i have the similar opinion about this book"
thank you!! its been interesting seeing some critical/more lukewarm reviews since the book has come out (in contrast to the largely positive ones i saw before it was released) 👀
thank you!! its been interesting seeing some critical/more lukewarm reviews since the book has come out (in contrast to the largely positive ones i saw before it was released) 👀
Mareeva wrote: "Yes! Esp abt the underwhelming conflict and nothing exciting going on. I was into it for the first half cause the banter kept me going but the second half just got old. Besides "the conflict" wasn'..."
yes! like i wanted bigger stakes so that the romance would feel a bit more substantial or hefty, but it just ended up feeling very straightforward in a very underwhelming way...
yes! like i wanted bigger stakes so that the romance would feel a bit more substantial or hefty, but it just ended up feeling very straightforward in a very underwhelming way...
YES! I absolutely loved People We Meet on Vacation, did not like Beach Read, and also felt very meh about this one. I was cautiously excited about Book Lovers after experiencing that 180º turnaround with People We Meet on Vacation but sad to also report that Book Lovers just didn't hit me like PWMOV.
I agree completely!! But especially with how utterly lifeless Dusty’s books sound! I think this could have been fixed if Emily Henry didn’t include excerpts, but after reading the excerpts, I was literally like “wtf is this”. Both Charlie and Nora are exceptional at their jobs and big readers, and this is what they find life-changing?? Also, why was it never addressed that Frigid was a direct parallel to Nora? Did I miss it?? I was soooo wanting a blowout in which Nora confronts Dusty about it and we never got that! I even would settle for Dusty apologetically mentioning it to Nora, but that didn’t happen either! Missed opportunity, IMO.
i definitely feel like there could’ve been a bigger plot twist between the sister and her husband. I was more interested in them getting a divorce lmao (that sounds terrible). but the sister could’ve had a fling with shepherd or literally anyone and it would’ve made it more exciting
also the nora and dusty relationship-i thought nora was suppose to be this ruthless ice queen with no emotions? she literally babies dusty in every scene they have together. like it made no sense to me. it would’ve suited nora’s character more if she didn’t spare dusty’s feelings or wasn’t lenient on timelines
also the nora and dusty relationship-i thought nora was suppose to be this ruthless ice queen with no emotions? she literally babies dusty in every scene they have together. like it made no sense to me. it would’ve suited nora’s character more if she didn’t spare dusty’s feelings or wasn’t lenient on timelines
Ciera wrote: "YES! I absolutely loved People We Meet on Vacation, did not like Beach Read, and also felt very meh about this one. I was cautiously excited about Book Lovers after experiencing that 180º turnaroun..."
yeah it really was disappointing for me too :( PWMOV just had the right combination of all the romance elements that i feel like were missing from both Beach Read and this book
yeah it really was disappointing for me too :( PWMOV just had the right combination of all the romance elements that i feel like were missing from both Beach Read and this book
Grace wrote: "I agree completely!! But especially with how utterly lifeless Dusty’s books sound! I think this could have been fixed if Emily Henry didn’t include excerpts, but after reading the excerpts, I was l..."
yeah it definitely was weird that the whole Frigid book that Dusty was writing and its parallels with Nora's life kinda never came up again...🤔 it felt like maybe it was supposed to be more of a plot device to get Nora to question herself and/or habits, but i feel like Emily Henry didnt really follow through with that plot development so it just ended up feeling very random
yeah it definitely was weird that the whole Frigid book that Dusty was writing and its parallels with Nora's life kinda never came up again...🤔 it felt like maybe it was supposed to be more of a plot device to get Nora to question herself and/or habits, but i feel like Emily Henry didnt really follow through with that plot development so it just ended up feeling very random
Ashton wrote: "i definitely feel like there could’ve been a bigger plot twist between the sister and her husband. I was more interested in them getting a divorce lmao (that sounds terrible). but the sister could’..."
yes!!! absolutely agree about dusty and nora. i feel like the whole ice queen trope that the book brings up is kinda just thrown in there as a meta element but Henry never really follows through with developing it. like it feels like she wants to be self aware and meta by exploring the trope, but never actually explores it
yes!!! absolutely agree about dusty and nora. i feel like the whole ice queen trope that the book brings up is kinda just thrown in there as a meta element but Henry never really follows through with developing it. like it feels like she wants to be self aware and meta by exploring the trope, but never actually explores it
Liz wrote: "I’m so happy to see I wasn’t the only one who felt this way about this book!"
ya honestly id seen a slew of really positive reviews for it before it got released so i was hoping id like it too but since then ive seen some more mixed reviews which is affirming at least lol
ya honestly id seen a slew of really positive reviews for it before it got released so i was hoping id like it too but since then ive seen some more mixed reviews which is affirming at least lol
I felt the same way I waited until 35% in but I’m just bored!! I’m not connecting With any characters and I just find it boring. I agree with you 100%
I’m listening to it on audiobook and have a couple of hours left and I agree. It’s fine. Some good banter but overall it’s not very compelling stuff. I’m going to write my own review but it’s “meh” to me as well.
Anyone else notice how many descriptions of Charlie's eyes are in the book? Every other page it's like they're turning some shade of caramel or going dark. No one's eyes in real life change color in every conversation.
THIS! I'm about three-quarters in, and I think the same. I love slow-burn romances, and this was practically insta-love, or, at the very least, insta-lust. Boring :( not enough build-up. I'll finish this, but I struggle to read more than 2-3 chapters at a time.
This overarching theme of codependency between the characters does irk me, I have to agree on that front. Nora with Libby, Dusty with Nora, Nora’s need for validation and people pleasing is a key theme. Also her hyperfixation on her sisters relationship.