A review by cassiealexandra
Forget Me Not by Julie Soto

funny lighthearted tense fast-paced

3.5

Ama is a small-scale wedding planner who offers personal touches. When she has the chance to work with a huge social media influencer and finds out that Elliot Bloom is the only florist the couple wants, she almost passes. Can she overcome her past and be a professional for the job of her dreams?

I had mixed feelings about this one. I started it on audio and decided it wasn’t for me (my big issue was a slight midwestern accent voiced on a person who was supposedly born and raised in Sacramento, CA; I’m picky, okay? And I’m not a cheetah listener like some of y’all nor do I want to be). Anyway, when I picked this up again in print several weeks later, I almost didn’t finish it again, but I was able to skim to the 38% point quickly and kept going to the finish line. Here’s what didn’t work so well for me:

The romance. And this is a romance book. I didn’t mind the workplace aspect or the grumpy-sunshine trope (and this one is GRUMPY: “Rude is Elliot’s brand”), but the “big reveal,” avoiding the subject of what happened 3 years ago is frustrating to me in any book. Add to that the number of skipped scenes and the commitment-averse, no-strings plot in the past timeline and this just wasn’t a winner for my taste.

Here’s what held my attention: the wedding planning, architecture, design, and creativity; Ama’s strange relationship with her step-siblings (her mom had been married 16x!); and the dual POV and timeline. Some readers would have preferred that both voices were set in the present, but I thought reading Elliot’s thoughts from the past was a brilliant way to frame the story. Finally I loved that this was a love letter to the city of Sacramento and to hometowns in general (the author says that over 70% of the locations in the book are real and she was intentional in making Ama someone who never had to “get away” from home to make something of herself). Overall, not a rave review, but this one had its moments.

To modify this to closed door, skip parts of chapters 13, 16, 18, 20, and 33. Yikes!

Expand filter menu Content Warnings