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Synopsis:

Marrying Kip Goodman was a last resort.

But she was desperate. Desperate enough to marry a man she despised.

All she had to do was get through the year married to a cocky alpha male who only thought of women as notches on his bedpost.

She had her reasons.

So did he.

They had to lie to their friends and families, try to survive a year with each other.

It was that simple.

Until it became clear she had to resist him.
Because Kip Goodman wasn’t who she thought he was.
And that was dangerous.

Genre: Contemporary Romance 

Tropes:
  • Surprise Pregnancy
  • Forced Proximity 
  • Marriage of Convenience 
  • Hate To Love You
My Thoughts:

I was first introduced to Anne Malcom through reading Recipe For Love in January. I absolutely loved Recipe for Love and it quickly became my first 5⭐️ read of 2024.

When I saw that there was a sequel to the book I loved so much which had earned the first 5⭐️ rating of the year, I knew I had to read any other books in the series, so I instantly added Method For Matrimony to my TBR Jar. 
Method For Matrimony follows Kip Goodman and Fiona Owen’s, friends of Rowan and Nora from Recipe For Love, in their journey of navigating their marriage of convenience to secure a green card that will allow Fiona to remain in the U.S, so that she doesn’t have to return to her Australian roots, where her previous life and secrets await her.

The story follows Kip and Fiona navigating their new marriage with one another, in their attempt to make their marriage appear real to their closest friends, only Fiona and Kip despise each other, making their marriage even more unbelievable. The pair agree to rules that each must abide by, consisting of living together in Fiona’s cottage and only sleeping with people from outside of their overbearing and nosy town.

As the pair develop further into their fake marriage, tensions begin to rise and as a result, the pair adapt their agreement to allow them to be intimate one time, allowing them to get the sexual tension they share out of their systems. Only this lights the fire in both Kip and Fiona and the one time they agreed to, is not enough – leading to them to continue a roommates with benefits situation.

Following these actions, Fiona ends up pregnant which is unexpected given that she was previously told she’d never bare children. This impacts their marriage, where the pair had finally settled into a civil routine of their fake marriage. After Fiona reveals the news to Kip, he is furious, stating that Fiona intended to trap him in their fake marriage. His fury results in him to reveal to Fiona that he will have no involvement with the child he fathered and after the baby’s birth, he will divorce Fiona and leave town. 

The story then follows the journey of Fiona navigating her miracle pregnancy that is filled with the traumas and PTSD from her previous pregnancies which ended in miscarriage. During this time, Kip becomes cold and distant with Fiona, until she’s involved in a serious car accident. This results in Kip to realise his feelings for Fiona and that he cannot make the mistakes he did in the past, as he now has a second chance at looking after his wife and child. His actions of neglecting his wife and unborn child, resulted in the small town of Jupiter to turn on Kip, taking Fiona’s side.

Following the accident, Kip revealed to Fiona his past in which was the reason for his initial reaction to the pregnancy. Kip’s past was revealed in Recipe For Love, where when fighting in the war, Kip’s first wife and child were involved in an accident that resulted in the loss of their lives. With Kip being away, serving his country, he wasn’t aware of the devastating news until after they passed and wasn’t even able to make it to their funerals to say goodbye. Fiona is understanding towards Kip’s trauma and reveals her reasoning for leaving her Australian home land. Fiona reveals that she was in an abusive relationship where her ex husband would regularly abuse her for miscarriages she suffered. With the pair revealing their history to one another, Fiona is not so quick to forgive Kip, as she never once let her own past change or impact how she treated her spouse, unlike Kip did. Fiona believed that Kip’s history couldn’t be an excuse for his behaviour. Kip reveals to Fiona that he is determined to win back the trust of his wife and create the family he devastatingly lost.

With a broken wrist and a few ribs, Fiona returns home to prepare for the birth of her daughter. As time passes by, Fiona and Kip return to the routine of their marriage, before the pregnancy announcement – leading them to come closer and closer together, with Fiona slowly forgiving Kip. Only Fiona is apprehensive of Kips words and when her green card arrives, she informs Kip that he has the option to leave and follow through on his initial promise – only Kip is truthful on his words of winning back his wife, as he believes their marriage is no longer fake. 

The pair finally rejoin and after finding out about Fiona’s history, Kip takes it upon himself to delve deeper into her ex husband – making his life hell in revenge for the way he treated Fiona. Only Fiona’s ex husband arrives in Maine Jupiter to seek revenge for loosing his family after Fiona, as a result of Kip’s actions. Fiona’s ex husband arrives unannounced at her home and discovers she’s pregnant and claims it is his child, before embarking on a battle with Fiona, in which he attempts to drown her in the sea near her cottage. Fiona is saved by Kip who comes to the rescue, battling her ex husband, before snapping his neck and subsequently killing him.

Fiona realises it’s time to get back in contact with her estranged mother, where she reveals her pregnancy to her. Joyed with the news of her first grand baby, Fiona’s mother states she will be flying to America for the arrival of the baby. This makes Fiona and Kip realise that their small cottage will be too small, so Kip enlists the help of his colleagues to extend Fiona’s cottage by the sea. 

Fiona reveals the truth to Nora about her and Kip’s original marriage agreement, with Nora offering Fiona part ownership of the bakery, as security for Fiona placing roots in America and therefore having a reason not to leave. 

The story ends with the pair navigating their marriage that went from fake to real and the birth of daughter. 
There was just something about this book that I really struggled to connect with. I really wanted to love this book as much as I enjoyed the first book and fully believed I would love it just as much, but I really struggled to find an emotional attachment to the characters, to sort of care about their story. 

I hit the nail on the head with the predictions I made at the end of Recipe For Love – I knew it was going to be a marriage of convenience to secure a green card. Although, I wasn’t expecting Fiona’s history – Kip’s I already knew of.

I felt like this book didn’t hold any emotion for me, like Recipe For Love did and maybe that was because I didn’t have any emotional attachment to the main characters. I didn’t care for them in the first book, so I didn’t really care for them in the second. With Recipe For Love, I felt like I was on a roller coaster of emotions – I cried, I laughed and I felt my heart warm with love, but with Method for Matrimony, there was nothing there. I think the scene where Fiona was battling in the ocean with her ex husband was supposed to be heart racing, but I just didn’t feel anything.

I will say, I found Anne’s writing style very easy to visualise, especially when it came to the description of Fiona’s personality. I could fully envision her sassy and strong headed personality, which was something I did like about the character. As for Kip, I felt like his story being revealed in Recipe For Love resulted in it to not have as a big impact in his book. It felt repetitive to revisit his history, when it had been mentioned in the first book – I suppose it was intended for those who read the books as a standalone.

After reading the sequel to this series, I’m unsure whether anymore books would follow? It was implied in the authors note of Recipe For Love the possible routes, storylines and characters that may appear in subsequent books. However, I felt there was a lack of mentioning or alluding to these in Method For Matrimony. Also the characters that were hinted at having books from the authors note in Recipe For Love, hardly had any mention in the book, some not at all. This makes me unsure whether I’d read them, because they weren’t hinted to or teased in this book. I think I’d only read them if they included my favourite tropes. 

The story reminded me a lot of Colleen Hoover’s Ugly Love, which was (one of) my favourite reads by her – also my first. The story’s had a similar storyline premise of the male character having a traumatic history where he lost his child and was against falling in love/having more children. I’m surprised I didn’t enjoy this book as much, because I loved Ugly Love. 

It bothered me a bit that it wasn’t revealed what Fiona and Kip named their daughter. We were along for the whole journey and it felt like I was robbed of finding out what she was called. Made the story feel like a cliffhanger and anticlimactic because I was left with answers.

I’m not sure how I felt with the whole Kip snapping Fiona’s ex husband’s neck and not being investigated deeply plot. Felt like it was made a big thing, just to be brushed past afterwards. 

I do think the lack of emotional connection towards the characters made it slightly harder to read and for me to pick up the book and be motivated. So for that, Recipe For Love remains my favourite read by Anne Malcom and favourite of the series (that’s if I read other books on the series – depending on if they are written).

My Rating: ⭐️⭐️⭐️

Georgia
♥
February 28, 2024 No comments

Synopsis:

Once burnt, twice shy…

Shay Davis is desperate for a fresh start — not just for her, but for the new life growing inside of her. But when she arrives in the quiet mountain town of Wallowpine, Arizona, the cold, unforgiving forest ranger who pulls her over seems intent on running strangers out of town.

Hoping never to run into Officer Brooks Graham again, Shay cautiously carves out a place for herself in Wallowpine with the help of her elderly landlord and the decidedly friendlier neighbors, Levi and Nolan — Brooks’s brothers. Despite their best efforts to dodge each other, small-town life lets no heart go into hiding, and with every fresh baked banana bread loaf and dizzyingly beautiful hike, Shay and Brooks’s walls crumble just a little further.

But Shay has never truly believed in happily ever after — because no matter how convincing it seems, experience has taught her there can only be one loss. So, the only thing to do with new bridges is burn them before they burn you…

Genre: Contemporary Romance

Tropes:

  • Accidental Pregnancy 
  • Found Family 
  • Small Town
  • Forced Proximity
  • Single Parent
My Thoughts:

The Burns We Carry by Marae Good is a book that I stumbled upon on BookTok, and not the popular side of it. It interested me enough to write it down and slip it into my TBR and was a book I completely forgot about, until I picked it out of the jar.

I can’t lie, when I choose the piece of paper out of my TBR jar and it revealed my next book to be The Burns We Carry, I pulled a face in grimace. From the title of the book, I didn’t think this would be a book that I would massively love, so I was definitely tempted to slip it back in the jar and pretend it wasn’t the first choice, but that’s not the point of the jar. 

The point of the jar is to be surprised by my next read and my only rules are that it can only be put back if:

1) It’s not available on kindle unlimited – trying to prioritise reading those that are, whilst I have my free trial.

2) It’s a book in a series I haven’t read the first one of yet – specifically if the first one is on my A-Z Reading Challenge.

3) It hasn’t been released yet – I think that’s self explanatory! 

I reminded myself of my rules and decided I have to read it, as it has been a common theme I’ve found so far that I’ve particularly loved books I was initially apprehensive of, in regard to the title or theme of the book.

Marae Good is not an author I was familiar with in the slightest and her books hadn’t reached my TikTok FYP. I can’t really remember how I came across her book honestly – I should really start noting where I’ve been influenced to read these books. 

When I picked it out of the jar, I had to search TikTok for a refresh of what the book was about and what had initially interested me to put it in the jar to begin with. Here I found that it was a pregnancy trope, something I am very fond of, but haven’t read much of recently. I think that’s due to it not being widely liked on TikTok, so I don’t find myself being recommended many on my FYP, but alas, I’m very happy I stumbled upon it.

The Burns We Carry follows Shay Davis who’s restarting her life far away from her California roots, in Wallowpine Arizona after leaving her emotionally abusive ex fiancé, following his ultimatum of either aborting their unborn child or leaving.

As Shay is making her way through the new place she will eventually call home, she’s pulled over by grumpy forest ranger, Brooks Graham, who believes her to be nothing of a preppy Cali girl rebelling from her previous life, who will eventually return home. Fully believing her visit to his town is only temporary, Brooks makes it his mission to run her out of town.

Shay arrives at the cabin which she will eventually call home to meet her landlord Jake, which she later finds out is also the uncle of the ranger she had the run in with. Unable to pay the first few months of rent, Shay offers up her car in exchange for Jake’s Jeep, instead of paying more rent and to also help his wife, Wren feel more comfortable on the drives to her cancer treatments in Phoenix, located a few hours drive away. 

After being introduced to Jake, she meets the other two Graham brothers, Levi and Nolan, who instantly take to her and want to help her in any way they can. Only their grumpy brother Brooks, is not so trusting in Shay and her motives. 

After searching out the new town, Shay gets a job at a local cafe and begins working to save money for the upcoming arrival of her baby. During this, she grows closer to Levi and Nolan, but is quickly warned away by Brooks who believes she will leave his brothers heartbroken just like his mother had done. 

Shay is determined not to let others walk all over her and stands her ground, continuing to make a new life for herself and her baby. Days quickly start to pass and Shay becomes familiar with her new life routine, cycling the distance to work on her pink Barbie bike, as she’s unable to drive Jake’s truck due to it being a manual. 

Noticing that Shay avoids using Jake’s Jeep, Brooks offers to teach Shay how to drive a manual vehicle, so the pair embark on daily driving lessons with one another.
Nolan and Levi suggest for them all to go on a camping trip, but end up having a “work emergency” at the shop, resulting in them to join the camping trip late. Despite this, they encourage Brooks and Shay to go ahead with the planned trip, stating that they should set up the camp ready for their arrival. 

Whilst the pair are setting up the camp, Brooks’ grumpiness appears to subside and his feelings for Shay become more apparent after they had been brewing over the course of her stay. Shay becomes more aware at her lack of transparency for her reason for starting over and the secret of her pregnancy. As Shay and Brooks begin sharing an intimate moment and allow the feelings that had been building to take the lead, Shay reveals to Brooks that she is pregnant before they go any further. This instantly infuriates Brooks who jumps to the conclusion that she was planning to trap one of his brothers with the baby and that she is just like his mother, for running away from her family. Brooks makes hurtful comments towards Shay and her situation, leading them to return back to Shay’s cabin. 

When returning back to her cabin, Shay finds her home inhabitable as Levi and Nolan had begun fixing it up for her. With her cabin unliveable, Shay is ready to leave town but is encouraged to stay with the Grahams until her home is fixed. After her argument with Brooks, Shay is initially apprehensive until agreeing to live with the three Graham brothers as Levi and Nolan won’t allow her be anywhere else. 

Shay begins navigating life living with the three Graham brothers, whilst avoiding Brooks after their heated argument. after speaking to his brothers, Brooks becomes apologetic for his reaction towards her pregnancy and does his best to redevelop their relationship, but this time in a friendship form. 

As the two navigate their friendship, neither can hide their feelings for one another or prevent them from developing, with them eventually admitting their feelings. Shay reminds Brooks of her pregnancy and that she isn’t interested in him so that he can be a father figure. Brooks informs Shay that he is willing to take on them both because the baby is apart of her. 

After admitting their feelings, the pair navigate their new relationship, taking it very slow and learning more about each other. Shay learns about his mother’s abandonment and the death of his father, that heavily impacted the three brothers. During this, Shay reveals more about her relationship with Declan, her ex fiancé and her reasons for leaving. After revealing to Brooks that Declan wanted no involvement in the life of his child, Shay begins the process of seeking sole custody, with Brooks revealing that he bought Shay’s cabin and has the intention of fixing it up for them. 

Shay is met with bad news that Wren’s cancer is spreading and therefore is ending treatment. As Shay makes her way home following a hospital appointment, she’s involved in an accident after reaching for her phone and subsequently crashing. Brooks rushes to her side, but Shay is met with an unexpected visitor from Declan following being informed by Shay’s best friend Elle. Declan arrives at the hospital worried about his ex fiancé and child, encouraging them to return home. Only Shay is reluctant to do so, which results in Declan to blackmail her into returning home, with the threat of seeking sole custody and making Shay believe no judge will allow her to keep her baby.

When Brooks returns back to the room, he accidentally reveals Shay is having a girl, which further encourages Declan to pursue Shay returning to California. 
In an attempt to protect her unborn child, Shay decides to return to California to prevent Declan from taking her daughter. Only this means leaving Brooks, so she tells him something she knows will hurt him and allow her to leave, in which she succeeds in.

Shay returns to California with Elle only to miss the place she built as her home. After a phone call with Wren, encouraging her to return to Arizona to see Brooks, Shay reveals her plans to return, only to stay in Phoenix not Arizona. The next day, Shay arrives in Arizona prepared to make the journey to Phoenix to start at her new job, only she’s met with a phone call from Wren’s daughter, informing her of her passing.

Following the phone call, Shay arrives at Wren’s funeral and is met with Levi and Nolan who drive her around town, revisiting the events that led her to leave town. Brooks pulls them over, prompting a conversation with Shay, where she apologies for how she left and reveals she still loves Brooks, before telling him he is home.

The pair rejoin together and the book ends 9 months later after the birth of Shay’s daughter, Wren. It is revealed that Shay and Brooke are married and are preparing for Christmas Day with their daughter. For Brooks present, Shay displays Brooks with adoption papers, so he can officially be Wren’s father, as Declan signed away his rights after her birth.
I have to say, I was blown away by this book and I wasn’t expecting to like it so much that I couldn’t put it down. I found myself staying up until 12am eager to know what events happened in the next chapter, despite it being a work night. It’s funny how you’re not tired in the slightest when you’re reading the right book. 

The book had me on a rollercoaster of emotions, from giggling to the feeling of my heart wrenching. I had a lot of sympathy for Shay, especially with her inner monologue, believing she wasn’t good enough, making me want the best for her. With that being said, I found Brooks initially to be so irritating with his rude behaviour, but we love a grumpy male character love interest, so I’m not complaining. He definitely redeemed himself in the middle of the book.

I wasn’t expecting the book to be a closed door romance, not that I was expecting it to be an open door romance, filled with spice – I rarely tend to go in with that expectation anymore. I was expecting an open door romance because of the language that was used and the feelings that were insinuated, so for that reason I was disappointed to find it a closed door romance – I felt like I was led to believe there would be some spice in it, but there was none. 

As mentioned, I’ve not read a pregnancy trope book in so longand I throughly enjoyed revisiting it. I blame TikTok for the lack of pregnancy tropes being implemented into my tbr pile. I wish we had’ve experienced Shay’s labour – would’ve loved to have seen Shay and Brooks sharing that intimate moment, as well as the place of where she was when her labour started. I have to say, I will be trying to make an effort to incorporate more pregnancy tropes into my Tbr list.

I’m surprised at the lack of tears for Wren’s death honestly, I am known to shed lots of tears during emotional moments, especially deaths. My eyes welled up, but nothing streamed down my face. I think that was due to the fact that I was a bit numb when I read this book and the tears had been used at other events in my life (hello coeliac diagnosis).

This was a page turner for me, I wanted to read just a little bit more each time, and before I knew it, I was several chapters past the point I had initially said I would stop. I think the short chapters helped with that – kept it snappy. 

Marae Good is definitely an author I’ll look out for in the future and would be interested in exploring more of her work which peak my interest.

Georgia 
♥
February 18, 2024 No comments


Synopsis:
Six years ago at a random diner I met a stranger and he became the-one-who-got-away, or more correctly the-one-who-didn’t-show-up.

A small advice from me to you: if you haven’t dated, touched *or* kissed a guy in years and *years*…do not try to crawl away or hide from the-one-who-got-away. It’s not a good look.

William Carter, the stranger I’d met six years ago was the last person I’d imagine ever seeing at my dad’s firm where I work. While I panic and fight off the butterflies in my stomach and in general struggle to act normal, I realize he doesn’t even remember me. I’m not sure if I should feel relieved or heartbroken. Things get worse when I learn we’ll need to work in close quarters to each other, but at least I let him know that I don’t have a crush on him anymore right away. Just in case he gets any ideas.

While I’m in the process of writing lists and making serious changes in my life, because I decide I’m ready to be the heroine in my own story; having William just a breath away is not helping things. Especially when things shift between us and we start to make eye contact in meetings. Then he shows up in places I least expect him to…as in blind dates and sex clubs. He also gives me cheese because he knows how much I like it and there are secret notes he leaves in my office. If you were wondering, I still don’t have a crush on him though. Nope.

Even though I’d promised myself I’d never wait around for another guy and postpone my own life, I’m afraid William Carter who looks at me as if I’m his and was always supposed to be his might ruin my hopeful plans. And quite possibly me for any other guy since I’m craving his touch like I’ve never craved anything in my life before. But we both know we’re a losing game so we keep admitting that neither one of us has a crush on the other.

Not anymore. Not at all. Not even a little bit.

Genre: Contemporary Romance

Tropes:
  • Workplace Romance
  • Slow Burn
  • Grumpy X Sunshine
  • Second Chance
My Thoughts:

Ella Maise is an author I accidentally stumbled upon before the days of BookTok. My first introduction to her was through reading Marriage For One, which I absolutely loved and set a new love for a new author. I followed that book by reading To Love Jason Thorn – I have to admit, the cover is what drew me in, but as I read, I realised it was yet another story of hers that I enjoyed. Marriage For One is a story that I think about often, despite my lack of remembering the plot.

When I set out planning my A-Z Reading Challenge choices, I was familiar with Ella’s Charlie, Love and Clichés book, completely unrelated to the book cover, not sure why you’d assume it was. When I’d seen that it linked to the letter C and looked very pretty, I of course added it to my list. 

I had high hopes for this book, but was knocked to be apprehensive following my curiosity at the reviews on GoodReads. I’m sure I said last time that I needed to avoid looking at reviews right before reading a book, have I done just that? Well no I haven’t!

Charlie, Love and Clichés follows hopeless romantic Charlie Davis in her navigation of working in the shadow of her sister at her father’s company. We first meet a flustered Charlie, running errands and collecting leaving supplies for a colleagues last day at the office. Charlie makes her late arrival at the office known, being flustered and awkwardly bumping into those passing by. 

Once arriving at the office, Charlie begins avoiding her highly critical and opinionated father, who owns the company she works for. Only when she arrives, she finds her colleagues gathered around the desks meeting the new team member and replacement, William Carter. 

Upon seeing William’s face, she realises it’s “diner guy” who she met 6 years ago at a diner where the pair had a date. A date which spanned over a few days, as the pair had an instant connection and chemistry that resulted in them meet at the same diner every night. That was until William failed to turn up one night and without any way of contacting each other, or knowledge of surnames, Charlie believed that was the end of their story – until now. After realising who the new team member was, her father informs William he would like him to meet his daughter, which prompts Charlie to duck and crawl away. Only she’s not able to hide so easily, not with balloons tied to her and therefore pin pointing where she was crawling to. 

After meeting, Charlie attempts to pretend she doesn’t remember him, out of fear he won’t remember her. However, the pair quickly become reacquainted, as William reveals he did in fact remember Charlie straight away. 

The story follows their journey from becoming strangers again to coworkers, friends and then the development and second chance of their relationship. Initially the pair decide it would be best to be friends, to keep things professional and because neither are looking for anything serious – Charlie as she is planning on moving away and William who has just exited a 6 year marriage. Only things aren’t that easy as they both live across from one another, whilst working being apart of the same team – resulting in them to bump into easy other constantly. As the pair become reacquainted, their easy going conversations resume from six years ago, making it harder for the pair to only just be friends.

When the pair develop their friendship, Charlie reveals to William her plans to move away soon. This prompts William to help with her job search, where he puts her in contact with a former colleague, who subsequently offers Charlie a job in California. 

Charlie’s father invites William to dinner at their family house as an opportunity to get to know him and make him feel welcome in a new city. Only when he’s at the dinner table, he observes the scrutiny that Charlie faces from her family. There’s constant nitpicking and degrading about the hard work that Charlie puts in at the office everyday. She is compared constantly to her sister, who is seen as the star daughter; despite doing the same level of work as Charlie. After having enough, Charlie decides to leave and is quickly followed by William, who is enraged. 
William and Charlie begin to spend more and more time with one another, leading them to re develop the feelings they had from six years ago, before eventually admitting how they feel. Charlie is adamant she won’t allow another man to derail her plans of moving away from her sister’s shadow, which prompts William to explain they will make the long distance work.

After William’s team miss out on working with a previous client of his, William places blame on Charlie for providing her sister with plans that William and his team had created, despite them having a negative relationship to begin with. This causes a rift between the pair, due to miscommunication about what had happened and that William was reluctant to understand that Charlie’s sister was already in his office when Charlie arrived, but stated she was waiting for William as a cover up for snooping. 
The pairs miscommunication continues when William is met with the arrival of his ex wife, who is also pregnant, leaving Charlie to believe that their relationship is over before it truly began, due to her believing that William would want to set up to being a father. 

Charlie decides she is done being blamed for William’s team missing out on the client and decides to confront her sister about stealing plans. When she arrives at her sister’s office, she confronts her, only to be told lies from her, prompting Charlie to become enraged and start shouting. This sparks the arrival of their father, who despite Charlie’s protests, takes her sister’s side. Deciding she’s had enough, Charlie decides to quit working at her father’s company and informs him that she’s moving to California. After leaving the office, she receives a phone call from her new employer asking her to move to California in 48 hours due to a work emergency.

With her relationship status with William being unknown, Charlie decides to move to California early to pursue her new job. Only when arriving, she’s secretly reeling in her disappointment and heartbreak at the end of her and William’s journey. 

Thinking she’ll not hear from William, she begins to start her new life but is interrupted by William at her front door with Charlie’s beloved dog, Pep. William reveals that the baby his ex wife is having is in fact not his and that he has quit his job at her fathers company after realising he only wants to be with her and will not stand with how she was treated by her own family. 

I don’t think it’s ever taken me as long to read a book, as it had to read this one. 18 days! I know 18 days isn’t a lot, but I typically read books in less than a week if I’m enjoying them. I don’t know what happened with this book, I didn’t not enjoy it. Work and life just got in the way and before I knew it, I never got round to finishing it. 

I initially intended for Charlie, Love and Clichés to be my last read for January, but because of life and work, it ended up being a book I didn’t finish until the second week of February. 

Yes it’s stressing me out at the fact I started a book in one month and finished it in another!!!

When I first started reading this book, I was really enjoying it. I thought Charlie was very relatable and I liked the chemistry between her and William. I liked how easy going it was. Then, the slump/work/life thing got in the way and when I picked it back up again, I was almost over the story. I was severely lacking in motivation to continue it, which made me feel sad because I really wanted to love this book.

I think if the whole work and life thing didn’t get in the way, then I would’ve loved this book and it would’ve been a near 5 star read. Unfortunately that’s not the case and that’s alright. I’m still a fan of Ella Maise and will most definitely read other books by her that spark my interest. Just because I don’t love this book, doesn’t mean I didn’t enjoy it. I really did enjoy it, but towards the end, I just wanted to start a fresh with a new book that didn’t make me feel guilty at the length of time it was taking me to read. 

I’m the type of reader that if I’m going to absolutely love a book and give it a 5 star rating, it has to be something that I’m glued to and complete within 1-4 nights. Otherwise, anything longer than that the rating goes down. I mostly go from how it made me feel and the vibes I felt in that moment of reading/upon completion and if a book looses that feeling because I’ve not read it as fast, then unfortunately it didn’t make a big enough impact to have a 5 star rating.

Final thoughts are I did enjoy it and it’s not a book I absolutely hated, I think if I ever have the time or nothing to read (like that’s going to happen *looks at endless TBR*) then I might revisit, using the word ‘might’ very loosely.


My Rating: ⭐️⭐️⭐️.5

Georgia
♥
February 16, 2024 No comments


Synopsis:

Victoria Barnett has it all.

A great career. A handsome and loving husband. A beautiful home in the suburbs and a plan to fill it with children. Life is perfect—or so it seems.

Then she’s in a terrible accident… and everything falls apart.

Now Victoria is unable to walk. She can’t feed or dress herself. She can’t even speak. She is confined to the top floor of her house with twenty-four-hour care.

Sylvia Robinson is hired by Victoria’s husband to help care for her. But it turns out Victoria isn’t as impaired as Sylvia was led to believe. There’s a story Victoria desperately wants to tell… if only she could get out the words.

Then Sylvia discovers Victoria’s diary hidden away in a drawer.

And what’s inside is shocking.

Genre: Suspenseful Mystery-Thriller Fiction

Themes:
  • Toxic Relationship 
  • Love Bombing
  • Mental Illness
  • Manipulation 
  • Medical Illness
  • Wealthy Family
My Thoughts:

Freida McFadden is an author who’s been on my radar since late 2023. I first read The Housemaid, followed by The Housemaid’s Secret and I’m desperately awaiting the release of the final book, The Housemaid is Watching. 
I have to be honest, I wasn’t massively blown away by my introduction to Freida’s writing. I rated The Housemaid and The Housemaid’s Secret 4 ⭐️’s and I enjoyed it, but at the time I was seeking the heart racing thrill that I experienced from Verity. However, I enjoyed her writing, so when I came across The Wife Upstairs and its similarities to Verity, it quickly went in my TBR jar and surprise, it was picked as my fourth – when will I stop listing the book number it is from the TBR jar? 

The Wife Upstairs follows main protagonist Sylvia in a restaurant preparing for an impending job interview. We first meet Sylvia in her attempt to save an elderly woman from choking to death, only the lady accuses Sylvia of attempting to mug her. Just when Sylvia thinks she’ll be getting into trouble with the police due to the accusation, in steps Adam Barnett who witnessed the ordeal and confirmed that Sylvia was not mugging the lady, but attempting to save her life. 

After the accusation, Adam revealed that he is waiting to interview someone, who seemly hasn’t turned up. This prompts Sylvia to reveal that she was supposed to be on her way to an interview herself, but feels too flustered to go following the event. Adam offers Sylvia the interview instead. At first Sylvia is apprehensive, but eventually agrees. 

During the interview, Adam revealed the nature of the job role – that being Sylvia would be required to help Adam’s wife, Victoria who has recently become ill, but not detailing too much about her condition. 

Reluctantly, Sylvia agrees to take the job, seeing as she’s about to be made homeless unless she finds a job and Adams job offer comes with a room at their home, due to them living so far away from the city to commute. 

When Sylvia arrives, she sees that Adam and Victoria live in a mansion that has become neglected and overgrown with plants. After arriving, Sylvia is introduced to Victoria where she discovers that Victoria is wheel chair bound, following a fall down their spiral staircase that left her with a permanent brain injury. Sylvia’s role is to be a friend to Victoria, where she will spend her time with her when Adam is working and her nurse is on rest.

As she starts her first day working for the Barnetts, Sylvia learns that Victoria has impaired speech and has paralysis down one side of her body, making everyday tasks extremely difficult. Instantly, Victoria points Sylvia in the direction of a draw which contains her diary. She encourages Sylvia to take it and read it. 

When arriving at the Barnetts, Sylvia believed that Victoria was a lucky lady with a nice lifestyle and a handsome husband, who had an unfortunate and terrible accident – leaving her husband to care for her and to loose the wife she believed Victoria was. This leads Sylvia to be sympathetic to both Victoria and Adam, but more specifically towards Adam, who she has a small crush and admiration for, which eventually results in Adam and Sylvia sleeping together. 

Sylvia begins reading Victorias diary, which starts at the beginning of her and Adam’s relationship. It details how they met – Victoria being an ER nurse and Adam being a patient, following a cooking accident which resulted in him needing stitches. In the diary, Victoria details how their short relationship developed quickly over a short amount of time, with the purpose of the diary initially being for Victoria and Adam’s future children to read one day to look back on the story of how their parents met. However, the more Sylvia reads, the more she discovers the perfect picture family is far from what it seems. 

As Sylvia reads more, she learns that Adam is not quite the caring husband that he has portrayed to Sylvia. He ends up being a narcissistic, love bombing psychopath who repeatedly put Victoria down. Victoria details in the diary how Adam’s true colours didn’t become apparent until the day before their wedding day, in which Victoria still went ahead with because she believed it was true love. 

After they married, Adam made the decision to move him and Victoria to Monatauk, which is hours away from the city where Victoria worked and loved, without consulting Victoria prior to the decision. Adam gaslights Victoria into agreeing to move to Monatauk as he accuses her wanting to stay because of an affair he believed she was having with her co worker, Mack. In the end, Victoria agrees to move away with Adam, leaving behind her nursing job and all her friends. 

When arriving at their new home, Victoria struggles to find a replacement job, but Adam encourages her to be a housewife instead of looking for a new job, in hopes of eventually becoming a stay at home mum. However, when Victoria takes on the housewife role and ends up spending her time eating and spending Adam’s money, Adam gaslights her stating that all she does is be lazy and spend his money, when it was his idea and even accuses her of only marrying him for his money. 

Adam ends up setting up a spending allowance in which he monitors and has the approval of all of Victorias spending purchases. When Victoria asks for permission to use her allowance at the gym to loose weight, Adam accuses her of only wanting to go to see other men. 

Adam is a famous author, who is popular among the thriller genre. During a diary entry. Victoria details how Adam wrote a book about a lazy wife who was cheating on her husband and spending all his money. At the end of the story, the wife is killed as punishment from the husband. Victoria is left uneasy at the similarities of the names of the characters in the book, to her life. Jack is Mack and Nicki is Vicky. Only when Victoria confronts Adam about these similarities, he brushes her off. Victoria believes it to be a warning of what Adam is capable of. 
In an interaction with Victoria, she tells Sylvia that there is a gun in Adam’s wardrobe. Victoria encourages Sylvia to retrieve it, which Sylvia reluctantly does. When she retrieves it, Sylvia puts it in a locked chest, per Victoria’s request. 

During another diary entry, Victoria’s friends come to visit her new life, but quickly leave following Adam’s outburst of not wanting guests, which he had previously approved of having. 

As Sylvia works more and more with Victoria, she realises a pattern in Victorias behaviour – she is extremely lethargic in the mornings and despises receiving her medication from Adam in her feeding tube. This prompts Adam to request Sylvia to ensure Victoria’s nails are cut as short as possible, as she claws at him during the medication session. When Sylvia enquires about the nature of the medication, Adam reveals that they are for her seizures, but when Sylvia googles the names, she quickly realises it’s for sedating and not for seizures. Adam is deliberately administering medication to prevent Victoria from being comprehensive. In connection with Victoria’s diary entries, Sylvia realises that Adam is not the doting husband she believed him to be. She decides to volunteer giving the medication to help take weight off Adam, only she deliberately stops giving Victoria the medication, which reveals that Victoria is more comprehensive than she was, the more she is weaned off the medication. 

When Victoria’s friends return home, they express their concern for her isolated new life. This encourages a visit from Victoria’s paramedic friend Mack, who hopes to visit to rescue Victoria. Only Victoria isn’t ready to leave without giving Adam an explanation. During their conversation, Victoria reveals how the picture perfect marriage was a lie and she is realising the cracks in Adam’s personality. Unexpectedly, Adam returns home and offers Mack a ride to the train station because of the impending bad weather conditions. Adam returns home after dropping Mack off and Victoria receives a text from Mack stating he was on the train home. Only a few days later, Victoria and Adam are visited by the police who are looking for Mack as he failed to return home after his visit. Adam reveals that he shot Mack and threatens Victoria from going to the police, as he reveals that he shot mack with a gun he purchased in Victoria’s name, that also has her fingerprints on it from when they first got it – meaning that if Victoria goes to the police, she’d be framed for his murder and therefore is trapped from leaving Adam. 

At the end of Victoria’s diary, it is revealed that she is finally pregnant after months of trying. Now that she has a baby on the way, she decides she’s ready to leave Adam. Only that is last diary entry she made before her subsequent injury. 

When working around the house, the housekeepers tell Sylvia of Adam and Victoria’s strained relationship leading up to the accident, detailing how crazy Victoria was. This leads Sylvia to believe she’s been manipulated by Victoria and her diary, so she goes to retrieve the gun – only Victoria reassures her that it’s safe in the box. Sylvia goes to confess what she learned in Victoria’s diary to Adam, who reveals that Victoria was crazy and that she was responsible for all the dents in the walls around the house. 

When Adam is informed that Victoria now has the gun, he goes to retrieve it – only when opening the door, he is met with Victoria who has the gun in her good hand. Victoria attempts to shoot Adam but misses due to her injury. Sylvia tackles the gun from Victoria, but the power outage means Sylvia doesn’t realise they’re on the edge of the staircase. The pair fall down, resulting in Victoria’s death. Adam and Sylvia make up a story that the power cut caused Victoria and Sylvia to fall down the stairs. Sylvia is encouraged to go to hospital to have her concussion checked, only she declines. When speaking to the paramedic, he reveals that he knew of Victoria through a man named Glen MacNeil, who was in love with Victoria, but randomly disappeared. Sylvia connects the dots and realises that Victoria’s diary was the truth. When the paramedics leave, Sylvia goes to investigate the shed that Victoria has previously encouraged her to look at. Everything seems normal until she leans down to a hatch and smells decay, there she realises where Mack is. Adam is behind her with a gun and confesses to everything Victoria detailed in her diary, but before Adam can pull the trigger, Sylvia’s persistent ex boyfriend Freddie comes to the rescue. 

A few months later, Adam is sent to jail for everything and Sylvia is back with Freddie, who she was in love with years ago and fell pregnant with – only to loose their baby following her fathers rage and physical assault that left her to miscarriage. Sylvia meets up with former housekeeper, who reveals that all the ladies who worked in the house had slept with Adam at one point. The housekeeper further reveals that she was the one who helped clean up Mack’s crime scene, before blackmailing Sylvia, reminding her that there’s more evidence for Sylvia’s accident than there is for the housekeepers involvement of cleaning up a crime scene. The housekeeper also reveals that Irene, the housekeeper before her was also killed and placed in the same spot where Mack was. As she was having an affair with Adam which Victoria had suspected. As Sylvia walks away, the housekeeper chokes on her food, but instead of rushing to help her, Sylvia decides to continue to walk away – learning her lesson from the last time she tried to help someone. 

WOW, WOW, WOW, WOW, WOW! What a read! When I set out reading this book, it was my 6th read of January, so I intended for this to be my last. I think I had just short of a week and a half left before the end of the month, so I wanted this book to tie me over for the rest of the month – the plan was to slowly read it. I read this book in 4 days and that was me trying to drag it out. After each chapter, I couldn’t stop, I needed to read the next chapter, which just went on and on. I couldn’t put it down! 

I’ve mentioned in pretty much every single psychological thriller book review that I’ve been searching for a book that made my heart race like Verity, and I had never found it – that was until The Wife Upstairs. Yey! I can finally stop going on about it, broken record no more. 

I have to say, I was apprehensive before reading it as I’d seen people say they didn’t like it because it was too similar to Verity – despite this being published before it. I liked that it was a similar premise, but it had its own twists and turns. I’m the type of reader where if I loved a storyline, I could read the same plot over and over again, just regurgitated in a slightly different way with different character names. 

I didn’t know where the story was going to go, I was expecting the same ending as Verity where you weren’t sure who to believe, but I liked that the decision was made for you and you didn’t have to think about which option you believed. 

I was rooting for Victoria throughout the story, I liked her personality from her diary entries and felt a lot of sympathy for her. At times I was swayed in my decision to root for her, it went from rooting for her, to not and then to rooting for her again, as the story experienced its twists and turns. Ultimately, I rooted for her and was slightly saddened that she died, but at the same time I think I’m content with her death. Especially since Mack had died as well, if Mack had’ve been alive, I would’ve liked to have had them have their happy ending. 

What I like about Freida’s writing is that in the 3 books of hers I’ve read so far, the beginnings link to the ending. I think it ties the storyline together nicely. 

Although, I still have questions about Victoria’s over joyful nurse towards Sylvia and her sarcastic like enthusiasm, but I guess that was probably down to the fact she was another employee Adam had slept with. 

With that, I can’t wait to read more from even Freida McFadden.


My Rating: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Georgia 
♥
February 03, 2024 No comments
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About Me

About Me
Hello, I'm Georgia! I'm a 23 year old reader of romance and psychological thrillers. I spend way too much time listening to Taylor Swift and spending time on Tik Tok!

2024 GoodReads Challenge

2024 Reading Challenge

2024 Reading Challenge
Georgia has read 4 books toward their goal of 30 books.
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Currently Reading

The Housemaid
The Housemaid
by Freida McFadden
tagged: currently-reading

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TBR

Powerless
Powerless
by Elsie Silver
tagged: to-read
King of Greed
King of Greed
by Ana Huang
tagged: to-read
Where Good Girls Go To Die
Where Good Girls Go To Die
by Holly Renee
tagged: to-read
The Inmate
The Inmate
by Freida McFadden
tagged: to-read
Sidetracked
Sidetracked
by S.T. Abby
tagged: to-read

goodreads.com

Completed

November 9
really liked it
November 9
by Colleen Hoover
A Long Time Coming
really liked it
A Long Time Coming
by Meghan Quinn
Practice Makes Perfect
it was amazing
Practice Makes Perfect
by Sarah Adams
Reminders of Him
it was amazing
Reminders of Him
by Colleen Hoover
King of Pride
really liked it
King of Pride
by Ana Huang

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