The Ex Talk - by Rachel Lynn Solomon (Paperback)
$9.51Save $7.49 (44% off)
In Stock
Eligible for registries and wish lists
About this item
Additional product information and recommendations
Discover more options
$9.74 - $11.52
MSRP $12.99 - $19.99
4.5 out of 5 stars with 2 ratings
$9.41 - $11.03
MSRP $12.99 - $19.99
4.5 out of 5 stars with 2 ratings
$7.56 - $11.00
MSRP $12.99 - $19.99
4.4 out of 5 stars with 10 ratings
Guests also viewed
4.7 out of 5 stars with 13 reviews
5 out of 5 stars
26 November, 2021Verified purchase
Book
Christmas present. Fast shipping.
5 out of 5 stars
9 February, 2021
Amazing rom com!
Enemies to lovers for the win!! Shay and Dominic have some of the best banter I’ve ever read in a rom-com! Shay has worked in public radio for 10 years, slowly working her way up. Dominic just graduated with his master’s, just ask him -he’ll tell ya! They each have insecurities and faults but together they are a radio power house. The chemistry between these two bursted off the pages and the whole time I couldn’t help but think this would make a fantastic movie! I highly recommend this one! (If open door romance isn’t your thing, you can easily skip those pages!)
5 out of 5 stars
27 January, 2021
Absolutely Delightful
There are some books that get a lot of hype and then you read them and wonder why (*cough* The Jane Austen Society *cough*). And there are some books that you read and totally get why everyone is losing their minds over the book. The Ex Talk is the latter kind. Shay and Dominic are co-workers who don't particularly like each other. And this is the first trope this book hits, but it doesn't plow into it going 100mph. Shay and Dominic don't hate each other's guts with a passion you typically don't see in real life outside of messy breakups (look, I loved The Hating Game, but that level of hatred was...not normal). They just don't really like each other for completely normal and understandable reasons. And then we hit a reverse trope. Instead of fake dating, Shay and Dominic start a podcast where they pretend to be fake exes. Their normal banter and thinly veiled dislike makes it pretty easy. Until they start falling for each other. And I freaking loved it. I don't want to give too much away (more than it's a romance, everyone, so we know what's obviously going to happen), but a few things I loved about the book. -Shay and Dominic. I loved them both. I loved the journey that Shay went on as she continues to process her life and things that have happened in it. And Dominic was just awesome. Also, Shay is 5 years older than Dominic and I'm 5 years older than my husband, so some of the age jokes were extra funny to me because I FEEL THEM. -These days there is a lot of focus on you and loving yourself and not needing anyone else. But the reality is, we're social creatures and we DO need people. There's a difference between being dependent on others and realizing you're happier not on your own. And I loved the journey Shay in particular went on relating to her loneliness. -Friendships and family. This book wasn't all about romance. There were work relationships, friendships, and some great family interactions that I loved. I much prefer it when my main characters have other people around them and aren't completely by themselves. -Loving again. Y'ALL. This is huge for me. I HATE how so many books don't deal well with loving again after death. This one handled it so beautifully with Shay's mom. -Real without the awkward. This one is teetering on spoilery, but it's something I wished I'd known before starting. With any book where people are pretending to be something they're not, we all know it's going to bite them in the butt. Otherwise we'd have literally no plot. HOWEVER, there are super cringey and painful and awkward and I-can't-read-this-and-need-to-walk-away-for-a-bit scenes. And there are still painful, but realistic and I don't want to crawl into a ball of awkwardness ways to do it. Thankfully, this one was that kind. -Representation done well. I'm not the queen of representation although I am looking at it more in my life and my reading. So I'm by far not the expert. All I can say is often it feels forced like the publisher told the author there were certain representation boxes that need to be checked. This one didn't feel that way. There was a diverse cast of characters, but it felt normal, not over the top. -Relationship. Again, I don't want to give too much away, but the way everything unfolded was just alllll the heart eyes. Have I mentioned I love this book? I laughed out loud (the Millennial jokes especially were actually funny and it's hard to do those right ;) ), I cried at least 3 times (I actually cried a little on the last page which was a first for me), I was moved. If this book doesn't make my top 10 of 2021, that will mean that my reading life this year was AMAZING. Hahah. Content: it's a 2021 contemporary romance, so there are open door scenes and a decent amount of swearing. Death of a parent/spouse is talked about and grieving and moving on is covered (but the event happened 10 years prior to the events of the book and is mentioned very early on).