Mini Book Reviews

Not Quite by the Book by Julie Hatcher

Emma Rini is running her parents’ bookstore and slowly building up resentment against her parents, who seem to take her for granted, and her sister, who is focused on her first pregnancy. When her parents announce they are retiring, she impulsively decides to take a six-week vacation to a crumbling manor house where she can get in touch with her inner Emily Dickinson.

Emma obtains mixed results from her experiment, but learns a lot along the way about herself. Besides the expected love interest, there are new friends to be made and breakthroughs to be had with her family. I enjoyed this book quite a bit and appreciated the bookish themes.

How to Stuff Up Christmas by Rosie Blake

Eve has just discovered her fiance is cheating on her and, after booting him out, is looking for a way to avoid the traditional family Christmas celebrations. She decides to take a pottery course in another town and finds a houseboat rental for her and Marmite, her dog. While there, she encounters the handsome local vet Greg, and they strike up a friendship. 

This book has both humor and heart. There are a lot of catastrophes and chaos, along with some misunderstandings, but eventually everything gets sorted out one way or another. It is a fun, lighthearted read.

Secrets of a Shoe Addict by Beth Harbison

This is the sequel to Shoe Addicts Anonymous and follows a group of friends–Tiffany, Loreen, and Abbey–who get themselves into various kinds of trouble during a school trip to Las Vegas. Tiffany is the sister of Sandra, who is one of the main characters in the first book. When all three ladies need to raise money fast, Sandra helps them out with a side hustle that will do the trick.

I enjoyed seeing these women grow closer throughout the story, as well as how they handled the challenges of their new job and their romantic relationships. It was also nice to see Sandra again and watch her attempts at dating. A quick, fun read.

A Shoe Addict’s Christmas by Beth Harbison

This is an adorable take on a Christmas classic. When Noelle gets locked in the department store she works at on a snowy Christmas Eve, she meets her guardian angel. As they clean up the shoes her angel knocked over as she was coming in, she has the chance to revisit several moments of her life and see how they could have gone if she hadn’t let her fears hold her back. Short and sweet, cute holiday story.

Shoe Addicts Anonymous

In Shoe Addicts Anonymous by Beth Harbison, we meet four women who come together to swap designer shoes and become friends in the process.  Each of them has their own problems and their Tuesday night group turns out to be a safe place to share their issues and help each other overcome them.

This is a light, humorous read, a textbook example of chick lit. The characters hover on the edge of caricatures and the problems are all tidied up at the end in a way that is entertaining although not totally realistic.

The Cookbook Club

The Cookbook Club by Beth Harbison is a feel-good chick-lit novel based around food, perfect for a cozy afternoon of reading. I was immediately intrigued by a book club that is centered on cookbooks – the women in the club pick a different cookbook each month and make dishes from that cookbook to share with each other at their meeting.  That sounds like a lot of fun!

In the club, we have three women who are all at a crossroads in their lives.  Margo’s husband has just left her and asked for a divorce (and left her a run-down farmhouse to boot), Trista has been fired from her law firm and bought a bar/restaurant to run, and Aja is pregnant and in an unhealthy relationship.

The book follows each of the women as they get to know each other through sharing food together.  There are a lot of mouthwatering recipe descriptions, including a monthly wrap up of each cookbook club meeting. I do wish there was more description of the actual club meetings, however; I think that would have been a better way to carry the story.  Instead, we get a couple of meetings and then it focuses more on the individual women’s lives, although they do interact with each other outside of the meetings at times.

This book has a bit of everything in the way of chick-lit tropes – a failed marriage with a farmhouse to fix up with an old crush, a lost job fueling a new business opportunity, and a pregnancy forcing a young woman to evaluate her relationship with the father.  Because of everything going on, it does jump around a bit, but I still found it an enjoyable light read.