Genre:
Contemporary Romance
Published:
January 1, 2013
Length: 327 pages
ISBN:
1481922602
3
Columns – Worthy Read
Blurb
Grace Douglas has a secret crush on Jon, the boy next door.
The problem is: at thirty-six she's well past the age of secret crushes, her
father insists Jon is her brother (by dint of his marriage to Jon's mother),
and Jon is nothing more than brotherly when he spends the night in her hotel
room.
Then a meddling fortuneteller convinces Grace's half-sister, Kitty she needs to re-stage her recent wedding – and get it right this time – or suffer the consequences. Dodging the bullets of a mysterious, if incompetent, stalker and fending off Geraldo, co-worker without a work ethic are a piece of wedding cake for Grace – compared to being Kitty's maid of honor.
Grace has to find a way out. Or be seen by the man she loves – wearing a bridesmaid gown.
Then a meddling fortuneteller convinces Grace's half-sister, Kitty she needs to re-stage her recent wedding – and get it right this time – or suffer the consequences. Dodging the bullets of a mysterious, if incompetent, stalker and fending off Geraldo, co-worker without a work ethic are a piece of wedding cake for Grace – compared to being Kitty's maid of honor.
Grace has to find a way out. Or be seen by the man she loves – wearing a bridesmaid gown.
Review
My lady Danu, forced by the inclement spring weather to retreat
from the beach and its parade of eye-candy discovered the free books on
Amazon. I Do Over, Confessions of a Recalcitrant Bridesmaid by Michele
Riccio was one such book. I, her humble
scribe, provide the following at her behest.
I Do Over is a
fast, and in places, a frenetic read; a pace driven in large part by Grace’s
snarky perspective. First person point
of view, while intimate, often seems, to my lady, more like navel-gazing than a
means to a deeper immersion in a story world when applied to contemporary
romance sans subgenre such as paranormal or suspense. In this case, it became somewhat more
problematic because one is left wondering if Grace prefers the merry-go-round
she’s on. To wit...
Grace suffers from the ills of close – as in living next
door for example – proximity to her immediate and extended family in ways
worthy of a sitcom. But sitcoms are
somewhat akin to cotton candy and whipped cream; fluffy and light and almost
never filling.
Dysfunctional is a descriptor that sums up her familial
interactions without doing them justice.
They are emotionally manipulative, self-serving and exhibit a mastery of
selective hearing that is truly awe inspiring. And Grace experiences it all,
accompanied by a silent, jaded and, at bottom, painful commentary while
engaging in a kind of self-immolation on the altar of family obligation as she dances
to the tune her step-mother whistles. In
fact, it’s like the song in one’s head one can never get rid of. The snark becomes the means of continuing the
pattern of unhelpful surrender –a pattern she carries into her work
relationships as well. One hears in the
subtext her own awareness that that self-immolation is the price she pays for
admission to the family or job even as she struggles to find the exit.
The snark Grace uses to keep her cool and avoid offending
her family or to keep her job is, at times, laugh out loud funny. One cheers for her at the same time one is
mentally screaming at her to do a Nancy Reagan and just say NO! Trouble is, by the end of the book, one is
left feeling much less sympathetic towards Grace than when one started. In fact, one is left wondering if the
author’s naming of the heroine ‘Grace’ was deliberate or serendipitous.
In romance the character arc of the hero/heroine is the
plot. Without getting into spoilers the end point of Grace’s arc is less than
fully satisfying. A much more defined
arc would have added the cake to the buttercream.
In spite of all that, I
Do Over is a fast, fun read, good for the beach or the long wait at the
doctor’s office. The author’s eye for
the nitty-gritty of family is both lucid and, surprisingly, affectionately
amused. It’s that detail that, in the
end, makes this book work, and reaffirms The Goddess Danu’s determination to
avoid long exposure to the company of her own extended family unless there are
copious amounts of free booze and chocolate available.
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