Rating: 3.5 stars
Smart Bitches Summer Bingo: Rock star or musician (this one has both)
Gwen Jackson started playing the violin at eleven and now, over a decade later, she is part of a popular ensemble orchestra and dreams of one day being famous enough to play solos and tour on her own. To pay the bills, she occasionally plays weddings on weekends with her roommate. Being told by the wedding planner that the bride wanted cello and piano, rather than violin, Gwen is forced to do her best and improvise, even though she's barely ever played the cello. She's even more flustered when the cello she's allowed to borrow belongs to Xander Thorne, popular rock star and master cellist.
Gwen knows her performance is mediocre at best, and is painfully aware of the scrutiny of one of her musical idols. While she's loved Thorne and Roses, Xander's band for years, as well as played with him in the same orchestra for over a year, Xander doesn't seem to even know she existed prior to this wedding appearance. He certainly notices her afterward. Shortly after their first proper meeting, Gwen is promoted to First Chair at the Pops Orchestra, a position that Xander has wanted for years. He wants to despise this seemingly timid nobody but is forced to admit that she is very talented, and has every potential to become a star if she just learns to let go and forget about the audience watching her.
While they initially dislike and distrust each other, there is also an undeniable attraction between them, and after a memorable evening when Xander invites Gwen back to his apartment to see his instruments (not actually a euphemism), it becomes clear that they collaborate beautifully together (and also really want to bang each other). Once their relationship becomes public, however, it turns out Xander's manager is less than thrilled, while Gwen's superiors at the Pops Orchestra want to mine it for ticket sales. Gwen and Xander also have very different ideas of where their career paths should lead. Will they be able to find a happy ending together?
I read Julie Soto's first novel, Forget Me Not, last year and mostly enjoyed the story of wedding planner Ama eventually reuniting with her lost love, florist extraordinaire Elliot. Both characters turn up in cameos in this novel as well. It seems that Soto, who like a lot of authors out there today, got her start as a fan fiction writer, and this book is actually a reworked Reylo fan fic that she didn't initially get a publishing deal for. There are obvious signs throughout the book that the protagonists are based on Rey and Kylo Ren, but I didn't mind it all that much. Obviously, this is a rivals to lovers story, and while it ended up being quite a cute romance, it starts out a bit rough, mainly just because I am never really a fan of the 'being mean and rude to the object of your infatuation' trope. Most of the book is written from Gwen's POV, with the occasional chapter from Xander's, so the reader is aware of how fascinated and besotted he is before Gwen is clued into the fact, mostly again, because he's rude, dismissive and outright unpleasant to her when they actually interact.
Neither Gwen nor Xander have had the easiest time growing up. It also turns out that despite being from very different backgrounds (Xander's very privileged, Gwen's not so much so), the same woman actually taught them to play their instruments. Once Xander shows a more vulnerable side, he becomes a much less frustrating character. Part of what made this book so enjoyable was some of the supporting characters. Gwen's roommate and some of Xander's band members were a lot of fun. The villain of the story and their motivations could have been more nuanced and thought out, though.
In my review for Forget Me Not, I wrote that I hope Ama's photographer stepsister gets her own book. I still hope that, and I also hope that in the next story, the protagonists aren't Rey and Kylo Ren with the serial numbers filed off.
Judging a book by its cover: I totally get why the author is excited to have this image on the cover of the book, it's a very memorable and sexy scene in the story. However, the cello in question is very clearly an electric one, which is NOT what is pictured here. I know that this might not matter to most readers, but I find it exasperating.
Crossposted on Cannonball Read
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