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Chargement... Meet Me at Willoughby Closepar Kate Hewitt
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Appartient à la sérieWilloughby Close (2)
Ellie Matthews has come to Wychwood-on-Lea to find a new start for her and her daughter Abby. But, life there doesn't start out as idyllic as she had hoped. While Ellie loves her cute cottage in Willoughby Close, the Yummy Mummies at the primary school seem intent on giving her the cold shoulder, Abby has trouble fitting in, and her boss, Oliver Venables, is both surprisingly sexy and irritatingly inscrutable. But miracles can happen in the most unexpected places, and in small, yet wonderful ways. Slowly, Ellie and Abby find themselves making friends and experiencing the everyday magic of Willoughby Close. When Oliver's nephew, Tobias, befriends Abby, the four of them start to feel like family...and Ellie begins to see the kindness and warmth beneath Oliver's chilly exterior, which awakens both her longing and fear. Ellie knows all about disappointment, and the pain of trying too hard for nothing, while Oliver has his own hurts and secrets to deal with. When the past comes rollicking back to remind both of them of their weaknesses and failings, will they be able to overcome their fears and find their own happy ending? Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyÉvaluationMoyenne:
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The story focuses on single mom Ellie and her daughter Abby, who move from Manchester to a village in the Cotswolds when Ellie gets a job as an an office assistant in an Oxford History department. They both need a change of scene, Ellie because she feels trapped by her loving but judgmental family and Abby because she's being bullied by the mean girls at her school. Ellie winds up being temporarily assigned to secretarial duties for Oliver, a stereotypically absent-minded and emotionally repressed historian who is finishing a monograph on childhood in the Victorian era. Fortuitously, however, Oliver has a sister and a nephew the same age as Abby and both need support and friendship.
Ellie and Oliver have a rough start but then hit it off in an opposites-attract way, and the plot is mostly them overcoming their limited structural conflicts to find their way to an HEA. Abby's deadbeat but charming dad hovers in the background but is never a real threat, just a plot-threat. Abby makes friends at school and at Willoughby Close and Ellie doesn't really make friends but the book isn't about that, except in passing. She has Oliver to focus on.
My niggles: Ellie works for Oliver but this is never an issue. The book was written before #metoo, but given the structural imbalance, it would have been nice for the text to acknowledge that Oliver has enormous control over Ellie's livelihood. People (including them) barely notice and no one cares. Really? Because women who are in precarious economic and work positions shouldn't have to depend on their bosses choosing to be decent to feel secure.
Another niggle: So many mean girls. The yummy mummies are all awful (except for one who may be OK but only because she may have lost her social and economic status). Look, I am not a mummy (yummy or otherwise), I think Range Rovers are a waste of money, and I wouldn't be caught dead wearing an Apple Watch. But that doesn't make me a Good Person, any more than having/being those things would make me a Bad Person. Oliver's wealthy gentry parents are uniformly awful (the owner of Willoughby Close is titled and not awful, to be fair, but there is a definite Affluent People Bad vibe in the book). It's just lazy context and characterization and it's not necessary. Mean girls can be mean without reflexively hating on gamer nerds, especially in today, when so much of fandom and popular culture is dominated by them.
Despite these annoyances, I did enjoy the book. The conflict isn't really enough to propel the story, but Ellie and Abby's relationship is warm and believable, and Oliver is kind of sweet and not as stereotypical once we get to know him. I enjoyed Ellie and Oliver's discussions about his work a lot, and I liked that her work environment was supportive and friendly.
This is #2 in a series but I haven't read the first one and didn't have any trouble following the storyline and characters. ( )