Must love books by shauna robinson5/21/2023 As it is, the book was a level of catharsis I did not expect in a read I picked up because I enjoy both Women’s Fiction and romance. Perhaps, a year ago, when I was Nora, when I felt like her, this book would have been too much for me. And, I think, Nora’s troubles will look increasingly familiar to an entire generation that just went through a pandemic and had to rethink their soul-sucking job and the depression that both the world we’re living in and the aforementioned job bring. There’s something about sitting in the uncomfortable feelings a book brings out. But it is the kind of book I didn’t – couldn’t read in one sitting. It also doesn’t mean this is a hard book to read, not at all. What can I say? Darker covers often mean darker books, that’s the name of the publishing game.ĭeeper, however, doesn’t mean bad. There’s a depth to this book that I did not expect, used as I am to covers that sort of give away the game. In most ways, however, it isn’t, and I don’t mean that in a bad way. The Bookish Life of Nina Hill meets Younger in a heartfelt debut following a young woman who discovers she’ll have to ditch the “dream job” and write her own story to find her happy ending.Īt first glance, Must Love Books looks like a light-hearted and fluffy read.
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