A review by beate251
That's Just Perfect by Nicola Gill

emotional hopeful tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.25

Thank you to NetGalley and Bedford Square Publishers for this ARC.

Emily, 29, is a teacher and about to marry. Or she would be if her fiancé hadn't just got cold feet and left her. She can't talk to anyone about it - her Mum is dead, her Dad Ed estranged and her Grandma Liz has just had a fall and has booked herself into a care home for recuperation. Then suddenly her Dad is at her door for a surprise visit and Emily's first reaction is to lie about her situation. Ed is a chancer who urgently needs money, so he hopes by making amends with Emily he might get into his mother's good graces and she might give him the money he needs not to lose his condo in Florida, where he lives with spiritual Shona. So he takes blindsided Emily to shop for wedding dresses and look at wedding venues. Meanwhile, Liz is talking to a mysterious man online and others begin to think he's not all he seems.

The story is told in 
Multi POV with Emily speaking in first person present tense while Ed and Liz are speaking in third person past tense. I found that a strange writing style.

I thought this would be a light-hearted funny story in which Emily might fall in love with the grumpy Ofsted inspector for her school or something, but this is not the case.

Instead everyone is lying, either outright or by omission. Emily is lying to Ed and her school, Peter is lying to Liz and Ed is lying to everyone. Some of them seem naturally dishonest, but what is Emily's problem?

Also, if you want issue resolutions, this book is short of them. Nothing seems resolved at the end - has the condo been saved and Peter got what he deserved? There's an epilogue but it's not shedding much light either.

I liked the very short chapters and I love the cover but I think it alluded to a more light-hearted story with a happy ending for everyone. Instead I got very frustrated with people always doing exactly the wrong thing.

As a side note, while you can still say Ayers Rock, these days the original Uluru is recommended.

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