About this item
Highlights
- When five-year-old Evie O'Shea married her next-door neighbor in the wedding of the century, she had no idea she was swearing an oath to love the man who would grow into the bane of her existence until the end of time.
- Author(s): Torie Jean
- 406 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Romance
Description
Book Synopsis
When five-year-old Evie O'Shea married her next-door neighbor in the wedding of the century, she had no idea she was swearing an oath to love the man who would grow into the bane of her existence until the end of time. Or that in ten years time, she'd start a long and winding journey to an eventual endometriosis diagnosis.
Now, aged twenty-six, Evie O'Shea lives in Paris, balancing precariously close to her Charlotte Lucas birthday. A burden to her parents, with no prospects and no money, Evie's humdrum life needs a shake-up.
Enter Liam Kelly, the man Evie married at the age of five and promptly divorced at seven when he had the audacity to throw a muddy football at her while she was reading Eloise in Paris. Clad in a Henley and equipped with toned forearms and eye crinkles that rival Gene Kelly himself, Evie is determined to keep her ultimate temptation at a distance while she flails wildly navigating life, love, and endometriosis on the banks of the Seine.
But when a family announcement shakes up Evie's world weeks before her brother's wedding, Evie seeks Liam's help to get through the wedding with some semblance of sanity intact.
Her request? Fake date.
Making a deal with the Devil always comes with a cost, though, and when Liam's conditions which include elaborate backstories and practice dates, reignite passions her disease smothered long ago, Evie has to learn to fight for her dreams and break free from her life measured in ibuprofen pills and heating pad settings. Or else risk being alive but never truly living.
Review Quotes
A New Englander dreams of opening a pastry shop in Paris, but life gets in the way in Jean's debut romance.
Twenty-six-year-old Evie O'Shea flees to France from her home in Tallow, Massachusetts, in part because of her toxic relationship with her mom. Evie finds her hometown to be "a place where my overbearing, high-society Southern belle of a mother, Caroline, reminds me what a constant disappointment I am for, well, everything." She also suffers from debilitating endometriosis, which forces her to make dramatic changes in her life. While in Paris, she contends with her anxieties over her brother's upcoming wedding and her mother's desire for her to have a suitable date. After a surprise visit from Liam Kelly, a childhood crush, her world turns upside down. They decide to go on a "fake date" to the wedding, but first, they decide to practice being a couple so they aren't thrown by each other's fake flirting, and a real romance begins to bloom. Liam and Evie's banter is full of light wordplay, as when Evie makes tea: "Just letting off some steam, don't mind me." "Oh man, how long have you had that one brewing?" However, Evie's endometriosis flares cause her self-esteem to plummet: "I had somehow wrapped my disease around my identity." Eventually, though, Evie develops a profound awareness "that home isn't exactly a place for me. It's a person. It always has been." Jean's portrayal of the easy, relaxed relationship between the two longtime friends intermingles effectively with Evie's frustrations. Jean also effectively relates the sexual tension between characters and shares the main characters' thoughts and dreams with readers along the way. Jean's knowledge of Paris, and a sprinkling of French phrases, gives the setting a feeling of authenticity.
A heartwarming novel of love triumphing over life's struggles.
-Kirkus Reviews