A review by now_booking
A Lowcountry Bride by Preslaysa Williams

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

4.0

I really enjoyed this romance by this new-to-me author. Immediately I realized that it featured a romantic heroine with symptomatic sickle-cell disease, I was already excited and ready to like this. I’ve lost loved ones to sickle cell and I have relatives currently fighting the condition so it was great to see a heroine dealing with her own struggles and feelings about her condition and her prognosis, even as she navigates regular life struggles of ambition and insecurity and that niggling feeling of not trusting yourself because you don’t feel good enough.

The premise of this is that aspiring head designer at a major NYC wedding dress label, Maya, has to take time off to return to South Carolina to help her father after he falls and breaks a hip. With her leave being unpaid, she has to find other means of making money, leading her to retired soldier and single dad, Derek’s failing bridal shop which he inherited from his mother. Together, they have to figure out a way to work on their imposter syndrome and overcome grief if they’re to find a chance of happiness.

This is my first book by this author and I definitely want to read more. This wasn’t quite Christian/Inspirational Romance per se, but it definitely had elements of faith that I as a Christian person really appreciated, but not enough to put it in the Inspirational category. This wasn’t religious fiction, although people kind of feeling let down by the church (and by God) is a minor minor theme. There is romantic chemistry in this so it’s not a no-steam romance even if it is definitely a sex-free one that I think even the most conservative of grannies wouldn’t have an issue with, and yet high steam scenes never felt missing in this. I loved the romantic interactions between the protagonists and how supportive Derek was of Maya’s dreams. This was an enjoyable read and I highly recommend it to anyone looking for a fantastic Black romance read that features a heroine with sickle cell and a hero completely out of his depth with fatherhood and with running a bridal store. 

Ingredients-wise, this had everything. It had a realistic heroine living her experience of a chronic disease, it had grief and themes of how communities recover from gun violence (based on the Charleston church shootings), it has grief and healing, it has elements of faith, it has the racism, bigotry, gaslighting, cultural appropriation, and micro and macro aggressions Black people experience everyday in the work place. There was romantic tension, good father-daughter relationships, bad father-daughter relationships. Trauma, heartbreak, healing, the works. I enjoyed reading this and I found the conflicts and experiences really touching and heartfelt. I loved that the author didn’t just give the heroine’s condition a token mention and wasn’t afraid to make the heroine’s condition a significant part of this particular heroine’s perception of the world. I loved the exploration of Black (and Filipina) history and identity and also the exploration of muting oneself to fit into a world where you feel like you’re “other,” and of feeling like you need the validation of the same people who discriminate against you to be valid. There were all sorts of real, uncomfortable but honestly-dealt with themes in this book that just grabbed me because of how raw and true and vulnerable they were in the experiences they shared.

For me, this book thematically and in the content was 5 stars. I even loved looking up the comfort food from Maya’s Filipina half and learning about the traditional stitching and sewing heritage from her culture. I loved the descriptions of how she blended her Afro-Filipina heritage in her designs and really discussed that importance. Perhaps a little nerdy, but it added authenticity and believability to what her design aesthetic was and what the conflict was with her boss. That said, where this boom fell a little short for me was in the actual storytelling and linkages: perhaps some of the conflicts were a little too easily resolved out of nowhere, perhaps sometimes the characters were a little too passive and things happened too much to the characters rather than the characters happening to things, perhaps some of the simpler conversations were a little too rushed and surfacey with perfection being saved for the deep conversations, perhaps the romantic relationship sort of came out of nowhere and was a little too “do they really love each other or is it just convenient for them to be together because it’s a partnership made in heaven?”, a symptom of not having the simpler conversations that lead to crushes and relationships. Perhaps the father-daughter conflict kind of never had its concrete moment of resolution. None of these things were major things in this otherwise stellar book that contained all the ingredients of a 5-star novel, but for me those missing dotted i’s and crookedly crossed t’s kind of made this fall short of perfection in my opinion. 

Many thanks to Avon Books and Harper Voyager US for a complimentary review copy of this book through NetGalley.

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