When a forced time – out can change your path
Synopsis
High-flyer Becky Thorne cannot believe what she’s being told. She doesn’t need to be signed off for burnout! Life has been a bit chaotic lately, that’s all. As if dealing with her enviable job and permanent meddling from her mother aren’t enough, she’s also inherited a café in the Loire from an estranged great-aunt, complete with sitting tenant who refuses to budge.
But nobody stands in Becky’s way! Ignoring her best friend Amber’s advice, she decides to storm over to France and sort the tenant out. Then she can finally get the café sold and jump back on the career ladder.
What she doesn’t count on is the tenant being Pascale, who is six feet of tall, dark, handsome and extremely grumpy about her plans for change. Not to mention the village and the secrets it holds about her past.
Becky’s path to success is all planned out. But the Loire has a magic she might not be able to resist…
My review
Becky Thorne is used to work as hard as possible, especially as her own mother pushes her to be a successful woman. But Becky cannot believe that after an incident with a laptop that has been thrown, she is signed off, before she has a burnout. The last thing Becky thinks she needs, is time to relax. Although, perhaps with her time off, she could take care of the café in the Loire, which she inherited from her great – aunt. With Becky staying in France, she can perhaps also deal with the sitting tenant who won’t leave the café, as Becky’s purpose is to sell the place as soon as possible. In order to sell the place, Becky believes that the café needs several changes. Changes that the tenant, Pascal, doesn’t agree on, as that it is not what the village nor the café truly need. While Becky and Pascal clash over how to run the business, Becky cannot ignore that Pascal is a handsome man, and that he sees more and understands her even better than her own mother. But while Becky starts to like the peaceful life (even when it’s not always that peaceful…) in Vaudrelle, her life is in London, climbing that career ladder, isn’t it?
I was eager to start this book, because I know how Gillian Harvey can sweep me of my feet, and take me on a journey of not just the start of a different life, but most important, one of self – discovery!
Now, I have nothing against people that want to be successful, and climb that ladder. But I have to admit that at the start of the book, I didn’t truly warm towards Becky. Ot because she is a bad person, not at all, but because she is so focused on her job, and doesn’t see what is actually happening to her, or to those around her.
Even when the doctor tells her to take some time off, she is sure of the fact that she is not on the verge of a burnout, and that the doctor is wrong.
But, I need to also say that I couldn’t blame Becky for being always on top of the game, because it is obvious that it is something that her own mother keeps on repeating. And no, it isn’t that her mother is so money – focused, but it is a matter of being independent, self – sufficient, and not needing help from anyone. And relaxing is something superfluous, isn’t it?
Even when Becky arrives in Vaudrelle, she initially keeps up that ‘higher class’ attitude. Meaning that she comes from London, so of course she knows better. And she for sure knows how to improve a café in a little village!
The mean part in me wanted to see Becky fail, or at least a tiny bit. Just because I wanted Becky to understand that a career, being successful, isn’t all there is in life. Happiness doesn’t come with the amount of money on your bank account. I have to say though, it does help 😊. But happiness comes from doing something you love, with caring people around you. And not with a call or a mail that makes the twitch in your eye return.
Vaudrelle is the kind of place that gives your soul the peace it needs. It isn’t it most exiting place in the world, but that is also not something Becky needs at the moment. Becky needs that calmness and peace for more than just one reason.
Returning to a place she used to visit as a child, staying with her great – aunt, makes her think about her life and about her choices, those that she already made and those that she still ahs to make.
She sees another way of living, one less busy, expecting one, but one that brings you so much more happiness and satisfaction. And of course, it helps that she has Pascal by her side! 😊
Pascal, who initially clashes with Becky, because of different views on just everything. But Pascal, who is there to help her, that shows her that he gets her better than she would think. Pascal, who has great aspirations of himself, but has also been struggling.
Seeing Becky and Pascal seeing from ‘enemies’ to reliable and trustworthy friends, was just so sweet to read. And also reading that relationship evolve further, was something that make me squeal! 😊
Becky and Pascal are very different, but they complement each other. Pascal is exactly what Becky needs.
There are several funny moments in this book, especially reading how there is this huge misunderstanding and how it all is being revealed. Not only was that funny, but in a way also very fulfilling, as it gives Becky even more opportunities.
This book is obviously about the journey Becky is going through. It isn’t an easy journey, because Becky does not know what *she* truly wants from life. Just because her life has been going in one way, it doesn’t mean it should be keep going that way. But it can be scary, take a new direction, one that you have no certainties in life.
And it is also a journey about Becky herself. As her life is taking a ‘time off’, she has time to think about what brings her joy, about what truly matters to her, and what kind of person/friend she has been in the past and what kind of person/friend she truly wants to be.
I truly enjoyed reading this book, as we are on a journey together with Becky, with a laugh, with a tear. Gillian Harvey grasped perfectly how life can feel like a trap at moments, but also how that same life can give us unexpected chances to make a change. It is up to us to decide whether that chance, how unknown that may be, is worth to take…
























