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'After I Do' by Taylor Jenkins Reid

From the BLURB: When Lauren and Ryan’s marriage reaches the breaking point, they come up with an unconventional plan. They decide to take a year off in the hopes of finding a way to fall in love again. One year apart, and only one rule: they cannot contact each other. Aside from that, anything goes. Lauren embarks on a journey of self-discovery, quickly finding that her friends and family have their own ideas about the meaning of marriage. These influences, as well as her own healing process and the challenges of living apart from Ryan, begin to change Lauren’s ideas about monogamy and marriage. She starts to question: When you can have romance without loyalty and commitment without marriage, when love and lust are no longer tied together, what do you value? What are you willing to fight for? This is a love story about what happens when the love fades. It’s about staying in love, seizing love, forsaking love, and committing to love with everything you’ve got. And above all, After I Do ...

The Secret

'The Ones Who Got Away' #1 by Roni Loren


From the BLURB:

Liv's words cut off as Finn got closer. The man approaching was nothing like the boy she'd known. The bulky football muscles had streamlined into a harder, leaner package and the look in his deep green eyes held no trace of boyish innocence.

It's been twelve years since tragedy struck the senior class of Long Acre High School. Only a few students survived that fateful night—a group the media dubbed The Ones Who Got Away.

Liv Arias thought she'd never return to Long Acre—until a documentary brings her and the other survivors back home. Suddenly her old flame, Finn Dorsey, is closer than ever, and their attraction is still white-hot. When a searing kiss reignites their passion, Liv realizes this rough-around-the-edges cop might be exactly what she needs...

‘The Ones Who Got Away’ is the first book in a new contemporary romance series by US author Roni Loren.

The basis of this new series is a group of high school classmates who were the survivors of a shooting. When the book begins, they’re all coming home for the first time to participate in a documentary about the tragedy – with the purpose of raising funds for a charity. We meet a group of female classmates who were not friends before the shooting occurred, but who banded together in its aftermath and even made a pact to live lives that would honor the deceased.

One of the women is Liv Arias, who has a story of heartbreak within the wider tragedy. She was the poor girl from the wrong side of town, secretly dating rich and charismatic Finn Dorsey – at the time of the shooting they were locked in a closet together, and locking lips … until shots were heard, and Finn left Liv alone to go and find his “real” date, and in doing so led the shooter right to Liv’s hiding place. She was spared, but she hasn’t seen Finn since he skipped town after graduation until now.

I really liked the set-up of this series. Under a different author, it could have been a gauche and clumsy premise – but Roni Loren hits subtle notes of grief and trauma. I think part of the success is that she doesn’t give us flashbacks to the high school shooting itself, but focuses entirely on the grown adults who are still dealing with the consequences of the horror, even twelve years after the fact.

I will say that Finn’s background is slightly outlandish. When he attends the reunion, he’s coming off the back of an FBI undercover stint that saw him assume a new identity for two years. There’s a whole thing about how he joined the FBI to somehow seek retribution against the gun-runners who sold the weapons to the teen offenders of his high school’s shooting. Yeah. It’s a lot. And never really works in the plot. Loren could have more plausibly just had him in law-enforcement, or military etc. as a way to combat his fear of victimhood and had an equally convincing background – instead it’s that, coupled with a white-knight savior complex and it’s a character development she works hard to seem plausible, but never really does.

More importantly – his and Liv’s romance is HOT and on-point. Part of me was actually hoping to get flashbacks to their teen-selves, because that young and fraught romance sounded delicious. But I am really glad that we only get them in the here and now, because Roni Loren layers their tensions so beautifully … and I don’t think it would have worked if we’d just met them with teen-angst and socio-economic divide. It’s better to meet them with that history from their teen years, plus the tragedy, plus time. It dials them up to about 1000 and makes their romance that much more delicate and white-hot.

Like I said – the one drawback was Finn’s OTT back-story in the FBI. But overall this was a solid set-up to a contemporary series, and I’m already looking forward to book 2 – coming out in June.

4/5


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'After I Do' by Taylor Jenkins Reid

From the BLURB: When Lauren and Ryan’s marriage reaches the breaking point, they come up with an unconventional plan. They decide to take a year off in the hopes of finding a way to fall in love again. One year apart, and only one rule: they cannot contact each other. Aside from that, anything goes. Lauren embarks on a journey of self-discovery, quickly finding that her friends and family have their own ideas about the meaning of marriage. These influences, as well as her own healing process and the challenges of living apart from Ryan, begin to change Lauren’s ideas about monogamy and marriage. She starts to question: When you can have romance without loyalty and commitment without marriage, when love and lust are no longer tied together, what do you value? What are you willing to fight for? This is a love story about what happens when the love fades. It’s about staying in love, seizing love, forsaking love, and committing to love with everything you’ve got. And above all, After I Do ...

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