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Graphic: Body shaming, Eating disorder, Death of parent
Moderate: Bullying, Terminal illness, Car accident
Minor: Alcoholism, Death, Toxic relationship
What I liked: The characters! Especially Rue and The Gals 🥹 I also really liked the setting, who doesn't want to read a book set in Key West?!
Who I would recommend this book to: This is a total beach read — if you have a vacation coming up, or just want something light for summer, pick this up when it releases on May 20!
I'm looking forward to reading more Katherine Center books in the future!
Thank you to St. Martin's Press and Netgalley for the ARC.
Moderate: Death, Car accident, Death of parent
Minor: Blood
I enjoyed the story but there were some elements that needed a touch more of sensitivity, in my opinion. I have been a fan of Katherine Center’s books for a few years now and have enjoyed most of her works, so I want to give this one the benefit of the doubt.
I liked the characters, the plot, and the romance of this book. I always appreciate a found family book, especially one like this.
***Semi-Spoiler***
The main character has an eating disorder and a complicated relationship with her body and how she looks.
I have complicated feelings about the way this was handled and I believe that it could be damaging to someone who is actively working through an eating disorder of their own.
Graphic: Body shaming, Death, Eating disorder, Grief, Car accident, Death of parent, Fire/Fire injury
At some point, and completely without warning, the book somehow shifts into a thriller with a first-person narration of my actual greatest fear that lasted 1.5 hours with me listening at 1.5 speed. I truly don't know how to properly explain the visceral experience of listening to/reading this book without spoilers, but I promise this is only scratching the surface. The main character spends hours coming to terms with her own mortality while also trying to keep an injured animal alive in a life-and-death emergency scenario. Every aspect of this emergency scenario is explained in gritty, terrifying detail and every eventuality is taken to the ultimate extreme. Surviving a hurricane on a houseboat isn't enough - we need that houseboat to go adrift at sea and eventually sink, leaving her to tread water in the open ocean. Oh, and she has an injured dog with her who is leaking blood into the water and making noises to summon the circling sharks. Every additional detail from that point of the book on only grew more and more bizarre. Even the epilogue and happy ending was strange and unpredictable. This book was a wild ride and I need to find more people who have read it so I can scream about it with them.
Graphic: Body shaming, Bullying, Death, Eating disorder, Fatphobia, Terminal illness, Blood, Grief, Death of parent
Moderate: Suicidal thoughts, Car accident, War
Moderate: Body shaming, Bullying, Chronic illness, Cursing, Death, Eating disorder, Infidelity, Panic attacks/disorders, Sexual content, Violence, Blood, Vomit, Grief, Car accident, Death of parent, Gaslighting, Toxic friendship, Alcohol, Injury/Injury detail
Graphic: Body shaming, Bullying, Death, Car accident, Death of parent
Moderate: Fatphobia, Infidelity, Blood, Grief, Alcohol, Injury/Injury detail
Minor: Toxic relationship, Vomit
Moderate: Body shaming, Death, Eating disorder, Fatphobia, Car accident, Death of parent
Minor: Body shaming, Death, Fatphobia, Car accident, Death of parent, Alcohol
Despite some concerns about the pacing and side characters, I found The Love Haters to still be an entertaining read and an above average romance novel that’s awfully close to being an excellent one. The vibe and content is very much on-brand for what readers have come to expect from Katherine Center’s novels. The vibrant Key West setting and constant swimming-related events paired with a sexy tall Coast Guard also makes it a perfect summer vacation read, likely intentional given its announced late May publication date (also on-brand for me reading the summer story in Winter much like my Xmas themed reads in July). Overall, The Love Haters is a very easy book to pick-up and is a safe recommendation for most romance or chick lit readers.
Moderate: Body shaming, Bullying, Infidelity, Alcohol
Minor: Death, Terminal illness, Blood, Vomit, Grief, Car accident, Death of parent
As a fan of Katherine Center, I'm sad I didn't connect more with The Love Haters. (I think others on here & other reviewing sites have already pointed out that the title of this book is odd at best and doesn't really align with the content). I kept looking for the spark that I usually feel in reading a romcom and I unfortunately have to say that I didn't feel it in this book. Her characters usually feel rich and emotional but they fell flat for me.
The basic synopsis is that our female main character, Katie, is a videographer worried about the latest round of layoffs at her firm. She's given an opportunity that she thinks may hold a layoff at bay - taking an assignment to shadow a U.S. Coast guard rescue diver in Key West, FL even though she, herself, cannot swim and is slightly terrified of anything water related. She meets Hutch and he's well... he's perfect. He's attractive and athletic and though a bit brooding by nature, he thinks Katie is pretty and by the second day he's giving her swimming lessons. As with any other Center novel, though, there's a lot more than is apparent from the surface. Which is when things get a little bit... sideways for me.
Katie and Hutch are both beautiful people who don't believe they're beautiful, so they need a quirky character trait. Katie unfortunately gets my least favorite character trait to convey complexity - body image issues that have been so well honed over the years that she nearly has a panic attack looking at a bathing suit. If you have a history of disordered eating, I imagine this novel would be fairly traumatizing to read, so please heed that content warning. Hutch, while a seeming caring, chill guy, reads hot and cold for no apparent reason all the time.
I really thought I understood the plot of this one until the last 25% - where it escalates into something that felt out of a different novel entirely. It wasn't necessarily a bad thing so much as that it felt completely out of left field and disconnected from what we'd been reading for much of the book.
Writ large, I was entertained (there was plenty of banter and moments of character growth and I did learn a lot about the coast guard) but it felt a little loose and sloppy for Katherine Center, who I consider up there with the best romcom authors. The Rom-Commers was one of my favorite romance novels of 2024, but this book - and these characters - missed some of the magic.
Graphic: Body shaming, Bullying, Death, Eating disorder, Grief, Car accident, Death of parent, Alcohol, Dysphoria
Moderate: Chronic illness, Infidelity, Misogyny, Blood, Abandonment, Injury/Injury detail