A review by shaykay
Don't Kiss the Bride by Carian Cole

emotional hopeful sad medium-paced

3.5

I definitely didn’t expect this one to go the way it did. Going into this one, I thought we would see a man significantly older than the FMC trying to help her in some way that involved them getting married. Maybe one night, they would’ve crossed that line and given in to their feelings. After that night, they would’ve been like, yeah, shouldn’t happened, let’s never do that again, or something that would’ve freaked the FMC out to the point where she just bolts in the middle of the night or while he’s at work and leaves a note explaining how sorry she is for it even happening. Then, years later, she’s in college, and she finds a new man in her life that she wants to marry, but she’s already married, so she has to return to her small town, back to her husband, and get divorced so she can marry this new man. When she reappears, the MMC realizes that she’s his one true love regardless of their age difference and refuses to just sign it all over without a fight, and the book would’ve been focused on him trying to win her back. Kind of giving off some Sweet Home Alabama vibes. So that’s definitely not what happens in this book. Lucky is 34, and Skylar is just 18, so there is a considerable age gap. Heck, she’s still in high school for most of this book. They do get married pretty early in the book. Still, he’s making it more like an arrangement so that she can get medical insurance so she can finally get help since she’s in a really rough place. She has a terrible home life and no support system. This is very much a damsel in distress situation. There is a spark between them, but he’s very concerned about the age gap and what people will think since they live in a tiny town where everyone seems to know everyone. These two had a hard time ever getting on the same page. It got really rough seeing her trying to figure out not just her feelings but how everything is supposed to work since she’s never really had a relationship since she always kept people an arm’s length away and was bullied really bad in school. I thought this age gap would be cringy, but it worked for this story. I even got behind the whole miscommunication trope because it worked for this story. However, the book kind of took that trope and ran it hard. It got rough towards the end of the book because we, as the reader, knew how they both felt the entire book, but they kept just letting each other pass through their fingers instead of talking, and I just got tired of it after a while. It is a really heart-wrenching story, and in the end, even though I was ready for it to be done, I was kind of left wanting a little bit more loose end tied up. Like, I really wished we had some follow-up with at least her mom. It was like after she left, there was no update from her, and I would’ve liked to know if she was still hoarding or if she was trying to work on it in the end. There were other characters that I was left curious about, but we don’t get closure, and this is a standalone.

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