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bukukurasi 's review for:
Table for One
by Emma Gannon
Willow and Dom are 39 years old, they are engaged, for about a decade. Yet, there aren’t any signs they will tie the knot. Dom’s parents have been asking about it and thought it was Willow who’s afraid to make it official, considering she never knew her dad, and her hippie mom come and go as she wish until she never came back for good. The only family member she has was her aunt Carla, who raise her like her own since Carla never married nor have children.
Willow and Dom’s friends are married and have kids. Their friends also asked about the wedding date but both’s answers were always the same, since their priority is still the company they built together in the midst of COVID-19 pandemic. At least for Dom whom then decided to call off their engagement just after receiving a huge investment for the company. Not only that, Willow was fired from the company she built with Dom.
While moving on from her break-up, Willow accepted a job from her previous boss, a media mogul to write about something related to GenZ and the social media. She profiles Naz Chopra, the It Girl whose principal is to be single for the rest of her life.
This is Emma Ganon’s second novel, the first one was Olive. I enjoy her writing and how she built every characters in the book. Willow’s character is not complicated, she is the type of girl who go with the flow, talented and ambitious yet easy going, until she must deal with losing everything she worked for, everything she loves. I enjoy the dynamic relationship between Willow and her girl gang, there were ups and down like all kind of realtionships. Gannon also did not built a sophisticated plot, what happen with Willow can happen to every one of us.
In short, this is a book about dealing with life: attachment and detachment with everything and everyone.
Willow and Dom’s friends are married and have kids. Their friends also asked about the wedding date but both’s answers were always the same, since their priority is still the company they built together in the midst of COVID-19 pandemic. At least for Dom whom then decided to call off their engagement just after receiving a huge investment for the company. Not only that, Willow was fired from the company she built with Dom.
While moving on from her break-up, Willow accepted a job from her previous boss, a media mogul to write about something related to GenZ and the social media. She profiles Naz Chopra, the It Girl whose principal is to be single for the rest of her life.
This is Emma Ganon’s second novel, the first one was Olive. I enjoy her writing and how she built every characters in the book. Willow’s character is not complicated, she is the type of girl who go with the flow, talented and ambitious yet easy going, until she must deal with losing everything she worked for, everything she loves. I enjoy the dynamic relationship between Willow and her girl gang, there were ups and down like all kind of realtionships. Gannon also did not built a sophisticated plot, what happen with Willow can happen to every one of us.
In short, this is a book about dealing with life: attachment and detachment with everything and everyone.