Dreams, hope, love, secrets and lies…
Synopsis
A heartwarming, feel good romantic comedy. ‘I absolutely adored this book. It gave me all the feels! A charming read full of warmth and heart.’ ***** Kim the Bookworm
Bea Winters is in desperate need of a fresh start. Being bullied at work is not her idea of fun and she longs to follow her dream of becoming a published author. When an advert appears in her local paper to work in a publishing house in the sleepy village of Bloomsdale, it sounds too good to be true.
She strikes up an instant friendship with gorgeous aspiring author, Eddie Richards and her dashing millionaire boss Scott Summers. But all isn’t as it seems in the sleepy village of Bloomsdale.
How does the local clairvoyant know her name? Who does the little black dog that keeps appearing belong to and why does she keep bumping into the mysterious Charlie?
As she starts to unravel the truth, it seems that everyone in Bea’s life is keeping secrets.
An uplifting romantic comedy that will warm your heart – perfect for fans of Cathy Bramley, Milly Johnson and Carole Matthews.
My review
Bea Winters likes her job, weren’t it for her being bullied by just one colleague of hers. But as we all need a job for a living, Bea just stays put where she is, and takes several deep breaths a day to get through it. And then just one day, she notices an advert… Not just any kind of advert, but the kind that offers the job and the opportunity Bea has been dreaming of, as it is an offer to work in a publishing house in a small village named Bloomsdale. While initially she doesn’t appear to have all the qualifications, somehow that same advert appears again, but slightly changed. And before Bea even realizes, she has landed the job! Once arrived in Bloomsdale, she quickly befriends Eddie Richards, an aspiring author just like Bea, who helps her not only finding a place to stay but settling in. And then there is her boss, Scott Summers. Bea enjoys her new life, there are also things happening in Bloomsdale that Bea just cannot explain… Like how does the local clairvoyant knows her name? Why does that little black dog keep appearing? And who actually is Charlie? Oh, and what about all the secrets that keep on appearing?
I never know what to exactly expect from a book of this author. Not that I am wary of her writing, because I have truly enjoyed every book I have read of her. But I don’t know what is going to happen, what is going to happen to the main characters or how things are going to evolve, and in this case specifically, what are all the secrets that are being kept in this village of Bloomsdale?
At the start of the book, I truly felt sorry for Bea. She is doing her job all the best she can, but with being bullied, it for sure isn’t easy to put on a smile on her face all the time. And that resonated with me on some levels. I haven’t been bullied at my previous job, but some people were so exhausted that I felt the joy draining out of my body after each day that has passed.
So even if the advert that Bea’s sees may have appeared in a strange way (let’s ‘blame’ it on serendipity), I was happy for her, to have an opportunity to make a change in her life.
Even if Bloomsdale is just the setting of this book, once Bea arrived there, I felt a lightness in my heart myself. I could feel that this was the place where Bea not only has to be, but where she truly belongs and is supposed to be.
It was sweet to see how Bea and Eddie immediately connect. They establish an immediate friendship, with Eddie being the best kind of friend, not only with helping Bea in every way he can. HE also listens to her, even when he might think that Bea is seeing things, imagining things.
However, I also have to say that I was a bit shocked seeing how Eddie reacts each time he is around Scott Summers. Especially upon learning their connection to each other… It seems that Eddie changes in a whole different person when Scott is around, and I just couldn’t grasp the why’s…
I also have to admit that while I could understand the attraction that Bea has towards Scott, but I didn’t like – like Scott. I couldn’t put my finger on it why exactly, but I felt that he wasn’t completely honest and playing nicely with the people around him.
Bea truly is on a journey in this book. Not only is she starting a new life in a new village, with a new job. But with all the people she is meeting in Bloomsdale, she also gets to know more about herself, her family and things that haven’t been said out loud.
The more the story evolves, the more Bea starts to not only ‘get’ people, but she also starts to ‘get’ herself, and make discoveries about her and those around her. Discoveries that perhaps as a reader needs to you keep an open mind, and me as a sceptic had me raise my eyebrows. On the other hand, who says that what I believe is the truth? Couldn’t it be the other way around?
Florence Keeling wrote a sweet, heartwarming story, about fresh starts, the meaning of family, friends and love. But also how some past dynamics can change a whole future. Everyone has some secrets, some skeletons in their closets. But the bigger the secrets, the heavier the burden. And by coming clean it will not only alleviate yourself, but also it will allow you to make amends.
But most important, with this book we see how Life can give a nudge in the right direction. How it can make you meet people that you need in your life, even if you didn’t know it. And how one advert can be the catalyst of giving you so many answers and make you understand yourself, those around you and how love, in all its aspects, make itself even more visible than ever.




























