Reviews

Lost in Paradise by Rachel Lacey

annaavian's review

Go to review page

4.0

Original plot, well crafted romance and vivid descriptions.

judeinthestars's review

Go to review page

adventurous emotional hopeful medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Loveable characters? Yes

5.0

Edit: December 14th, 2023, audiobook review


Lost in Paradise is one of the first books I read by Rachel Lacey and my first 5⭐️. I have a signed copy on my bookshelf, of which I’m very proud. It’s a very Rachel Lacey book in that it’s impossible not to fall in love with the MCs. In this one, there aren’t a lot of secondary characters—the one that do exist are very secondary yet important to the story—and for good reason: for a large part of the book, the MCs, Nicole, an American, and Fiona, a British expat living in France, are stranded at sea then on an island. It should be tragic, and at times it is, but it’s also full of hope and instead of being dreadful, it becomes the beginning of something beautiful.

I first read this book during lockdown, after loving Don’t Cry for Me. Then as now, I loved the way the characters’ personalities are unveiled progressively, Fiona appearing as strong and laid-back at first then revealing her vulnerability, and Nicole, freshly divorced, growing from confused and scared at the beginning to self-assured and confident in what she wants. And all along the attraction between the two women keeps the tone rather light. I don’t know anything about cruise ships, pirates, and being lost at sea, but I’m pretty sure the situation Nicole and Fiona find themselves in would be terrifying. The MCs aren’t nonchalant about it, but the author keeps the overall mood uplifting, a Lacey trademark.

A word about the narration: Ellie Gossage is a new to me narrator and I hope I’ll have the opportunity to listen to her work often. The voices fit the characters flawlessly, the pace is right, everything is as should be.

This book isn’t perfect, there are a few bumps here and there but it’s so heart-warming that while I know my original 5⭐️ are probably slightly excessive (I don’t believe in star ratings anyway, they’re never fair), I’ll stick to them for the pure enjoyment it brought me twice.

------------------------------------------------

It seems fitting that in my fourth week of self-isolation / lockdown, I’d read a story about two women stranded on a desert island. I didn’t do it on purpose, I was looking for a book to take my mind off my growing anxiety last night, and since I had enjoyed Don't Cry for Me so much not long ago and my friend Gaby, over at LezReviewBooks, had told me this one was really good too (here’s her review to prove it), it sounded like a good choice. I didn’t read the blurb beforehand, so everything came as a surprise.

When she treated herself to a cruise on the Mediterranean sea after her divorce, Nicole Morella never expected pirates to take over the ship, much less to meet the love of her life and escape with her on a lifeboat. From the moment she got her first glimpse of Fiona Boone at the bar, attraction flared. Nicole has known for a long time that she’s bisexual but she’s never gone any further with a woman than a few kisses with a girlfriend in college. Fiona, a British expat on the French Riviera, was supposed to be spending the cruise with a casual lover but he stood her up. Unlike Nicole, Fiona identifies as gay but finds men more open to no-strings affairs, the only kind of relationship she’s into. She’s no more ready for Nicole than Nicole is for her, but life has a way to not let you decide the timing of such things.

I loved both MCs, loved them more and more as the book progressed and their complexity came to light. In the first pages, Fiona appears as extremely confident, the rescuer when the ship is highjacked, the one who knows how to react in desperate situations. On the lifeboat, then on the island, she shows a much more vulnerable side of herself, a side that comes to the forefront after she and Nicole come back to their “normal” life. She’s a survivor in many ways, not just from what happened on the cruise, and her strategy to survive has been to close herself off. Nicole is less damaged but just as layered and her strength comes out a little more with every plot twist.

There aren’t a lot of secondary characters, since a big part of the novel is about the two women being stranded on a desert Greek island, but the few that pass by – Nicole’s parents, Fiona’s father – feel real enough. I’m not sure how much of the story itself is plausible but it really doesn’t matter.

I think I’ve found another author whose writing simply works for me. This is my second Rachel Lacey book and I am so looking forward to many more. The two I have read evoke the same kind of feelings as one of my favourite authors’ books, Lise Gold. Life isn’t always pretty (duh) but some people, some connections make it worthwhile, and this is what those books are about.

I received a copy from the author and I am voluntarily leaving a review.

Read all my reviews on my blog (and please buy from the affiliation links!): Jude in the Stars

books77's review against another edition

Go to review page

adventurous emotional tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.0

b_westfall's review against another edition

Go to review page

adventurous emotional hopeful inspiring sad tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? N/A
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? N/A

5.0

elizatanner's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

The struggle is real. The struggle of surviving the elements and your past. I have not been disappointed by Rachel Lacey, the author. This author does a fantastic job of developing characters and plot to where you want to keep reading well past your bedtime.

sasha2599's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Lost in Paradise is outside my usual genre of traditional M/F romance, but because I enjoy Rachel Lacey's writing style, I was eager to read it. I was so glad I enjoyed Fiona and Nicole's love story. It's a journey of personal discovery for both characters, who were both well-developed. I plan on going back and reading Crash and Burn, the first in the Stranded series- can't believe I missed it somehow!

ghostlycreature's review against another edition

Go to review page

adventurous emotional funny tense fast-paced
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes

5.0

mariangb1964's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

I started reading and I couldn't stop. Intriging start of the book in the first two chapters. I had to read along on this story. A real pageturner. Thank you Rachel.

deanie's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Bisexual divorcee Nicole Morella is reclaiming her identity after the collapse of her marriage by pampering herself with a Mediterranean yacht cruise. On the ship, she meets Fiona Broome, a British expat artist living in France -- and sparks fly. Until their ship is boarded by pirates looking to hold the passengers for ransom, and Nicole and Fiona escape in a lifeboat, only to be stranded on a deserted Mediterranean island together.

In addition to being a fun stranded-on-a-deserted-island book, this novel is also a much deeper exploration of sexuality and new relationships. Fiona's worried that she's just Nicole's post-divorce rebound and Nicole is afraid that commitment-phobic Fiona will never be ready for a real relationship. Plus, there's a lot of family drama, too, which makes this an even richer book.

xakyr's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

FTC DISCLAIMER: I RECEIVED AN E-ARC FROM THE AUTHOR. I VOLUNTARILY OFFER MY HONEST REVIEW OF THE BOOK, THOUGH IT IS NOT EXPECTED OF ME! RECEIPT OF THIS BOOK IN THIS MANNER DOES NOT AFFECT MY OPINION OF THE BOOK OR THE CONTENT OF MY REVIEW!

It's been quite I while since I read one of Rachel Lacey's Stranded books, but that didn't diminish this book in the slightest. It is also, I believe, my first foray into a F/F romance! I have to say, this was a very interesting read!

I loved the slow burn of the romance between Fiona and Nicole! I also found it easy to identify and connect with Fiona. I really loved Fiona's dictate to Nicole that they take time apart for Nicole to find herself, as I felt that her concerns were extremely realistic of the situation. I suspected something had happened in Fiona's past, but the reveal of it was a complete surprise for me! I loved how Nicole's parents viewed themselves as "Modern" Catholics, since more traditionalist Catholics are the reason I left that faith entirely, so many years ago!

This was a quick read, but told a complete story, and was very engaging and entertaining to me! I can't wait to see where the rest of the series goes!