Reviews tagging 'Confinement'

Lockdown on London Lane by Beth Reekles

2 reviews

beate251's review against another edition

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emotional funny hopeful lighthearted medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

2.75

Apparently this book started life under the title Lockdown on London Lane. Changing titles is a bugbear of mine, it's so unnecessary.

This author usually writes YA novels, and by God it shows. The characters seem to be in their late twenties, but they speak and act like 17 year olds. One is a lovesick video game nerd, another of the yoga, kale smoothie and gratitude journal ilk whose biggest worry about lockdown with her new beau is "he's going to be here when I poop". 💩

My biggest annoyance was how the author wasn't content with the realities of a national lockdown so she invented a 7 day lockdown in just one particular building, regardless of the fact that no managing agents have the right to physically lock you in (or out of) a building and force you to get food deliveries. If someone had tried to lock me in my building, I'd have called the police. If they react like that over ONE case at the beginning of the pandemic those residents can look forward to a year of quarantine once the shit really hits the fan! However, the real lockdowns allowed people out of their houses for various purposes and furloughed them from their jobs so people couldn't lose their jobs for simply not turning up! There was a hilarious statement on page 90: " Because he's a nurse, there's no way Zack could go into work." Are you for real? Those are exactly the people who had to go to work, especially if they didn't have COVID!

But apart from these clangers, the pandemic isn't really seen as a worrying situation, those people just moan about being stuck with (or without) people they didn't intend to, because what if they see them without makeup? 🙄

Honestly, this was such inconsequential fluff that I didn't care about any of them, especially when they manufactured an existential crisis out of the fact that one boyfriend ordered a pizza with pineapple on it, which of course meant he probably didn't want kids or something.

Also, please check your spelling - it's fazed not phased, and the past tense of text is texted. And why do we get the American "gotten"?

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midge_x's review against another edition

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emotional funny hopeful lighthearted relaxing medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

Love, Locked Down centres around five households flung together during the lockdown of their apartment block. Reading like a book version of the hit film Love Actually, the book shares the stories of each apartment building multiple connections between each character whilst they're stuck with no way out. Please see trigger warnings at the end of this review.

Beth Reekles perfectly captures multiple POVs from characters in different places of life. Ethan, a gaming streamer, is left out of sorts after his girlfriend Charlotte is locked out of the block, leaving him to realise how much he truly loves her. In the increasingly awkward Apartment 17, Serena questions everything she knows about her seemingly stable four-year relationship with Zach over a Hawaiian Pizza. Meanwhile, her neighbour Isla is suddenly trapped with her new dreamboat boyfriend Danny where routines and schedules clash and tensions grow, leaving Isla worried about the future of their relationship.

When Imogen tries to sneak out from a one night stand with Nate (or is it Neil?), she ends up in everyone's worse nightmare when she is unable to leave. The poorly timed hook-up leaves wild child Imogen wondering what she really wants from life. Finally, Imogen's best friend Lucy is trapped at her Bridezilla sister-in-law's Hen Weekend hosted by Liv. Bride Kim and Maid of Honour Liv have been best friends forever, so hosting a Hen Weekend should be breezy, right? Wrong - with the rising tensions of the four girls the weekend turns into something fresh out of hell mixed with flirting, tears and screaming. At the end of the book, one characters embarrassment threads all of the stories together creating a last minute 'aw' moment.

Overall, the book is a fun read based on a cutesy premise that could realistically have happened to anyone in the height of the pandemic. The diverse and interesting characters makes the reader invested in the state of their relationships and Reekles somehow makes it easy follow. Although an amazing book, it's not quite five stars as I think some of the stories only touched the surface and there was room for a lot more exploration. Also I definitely think that the book could have benefitted with a diagram of the apartment block to serve as a who's who.

TRIGGER WARNINGS: Emotional abuse, Outing of a LGBT+ character, Alcohol, Arguments, References to Lockdown and Covid-19.

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