Reviews

Summer at Willow Lake by Susan Wiggs

scrapanda's review against another edition

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emotional relaxing medium-paced

4.0

jakitcfw's review against another edition

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4.0

It felt like she was trying to be Maeve Binchy or Deborah Smith, but she's not and in a good way. This book felt like those authors, but less intense and just less sad. So I guess you could say less realistic. I really liked it and am so glad it was a free on kindle teaser, now I know what I want to buy next!

lifeofvicki's review against another edition

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4.0

This is the first book in The Lakeshore Chronicles series. I really enjoyed it because as the first book it set a great tone for me to want to read the rest of the series. In fact, I was eager to jump to the next book so I could see what was going on with the characters I was quickly growing to know and love! That, to me is the sign of a good book and a great author. I was entertained without getting bored. To me, the book as a little bit of everything: love, laughter, a little mystery and at its core, a great foundation of characters that you WANT to know more about.

domicspinnwand's review against another edition

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3.0

Well... Ich hab ja keine hohe Literatur erwartet , aber etwas weniger platt hätte es schon sein können. Ich such ja immer noch nach einer Robin Carr Alternative, aber Frau Wiggs wirds wohl auch nicht werden. Die ganze Story war mir dann doch zu arg Fried-Freude-Eierkuchen und wenn frau als Europäerin ohne nennenswerte USA-Erfahrung mit der Sommercamp-Romantik nicht wirklich vertraut ist, macht es das nicht besser. Ich hab dummerweise gleich Band 2 der Reihe erworben - war halt günstig, aber den werde ich sicher nicht gleich nachher lesen. Sind auch eher 2.5 als 3 Sterne.

librarianinperiwinkle's review against another edition

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3.0

Olivia Bellamy is a talented "fluffer" of real estate, but her eye for design doesn't transfer to her romantic life, and once again she has chosen poorly when it comes to men. She has been expecting a proposal, not another disillusionment, and when the ax falls, she takes her grandmother up on a summer-long job offer to escape the city and lick her metaphorical wounds. Olivia is tasked with getting Camp Kioga, the family's former summer camp, rehabilitated in time for her grandparents' 50th wedding celebration. Problem is, the only local contractor available turns out to be the very same man who broke her heart when they were teenage counselors at the camp ten years ago.

Connor Davis isn't quite the Bad Boy he likes to let people think he is. He has built a successful business and plans to build his dream home on a piece of property he bought. But dream homes cost money, so he takes the job at Camp Kioga not realizing that "Olivia" is the same person as "Lolly," his former best friend and the love of his life. He never told her what really happened all those years ago, so he's got a steep hill to climb to win her trust again.

This is the first installment in the Lakeshore Chronicles series, and it's interesting how many subplots/secondary characters end up getting novels of their own later. Ms. Wiggs does a good job of laying the groundwork early. Of course, part of the reason I know that is that I accidentally read this book fourth, or so, instead of first. I'm not sure how that happened, as I hate reading series out of order, and I've owned a copy of this book for so long, I no longer recall when/where/how I came to have it on my nightstand.

As with most, if not all(?), the other books in this series, this tale is non-linear in chronology, slowly doling out information to readers, while the main characters know most of what happened all those years (and even decades) ago. I like this style better in the other books where the characters are more often learning alongside the reader what really happened at crucial junctures in the past. This volume would have been better had the revelations occurred more quickly, in my opinion. As it was, I sometimes grew tired of Olivia's repetitive insecurity--by the age of 27, you'd think at least some of that would have worn off, especially when her business became so popular and she lost the weight she'd gained in adolescence. It's a good beach read, but lacks the depth of later books in the series.

For readers' advisors: story doorway is primary, character secondary. There are a couple of sex scenes, but they're not particularly explicit, as well as some inner dialogue (monologues?) of horny adolescents. Some mild swearing on occasion as well.

irasandra's review against another edition

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5.0

Love this series

_lilbey_'s review against another edition

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2.0

Just ok. It was slow and I felt nothing happened. The blurb promised a mystery and there was none, everyone overcame their issues with no drama, there was just no tension at all. Only a lot of predictability.

nighteyes82's review against another edition

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3.0

that was an other good read from Wiggs!

temast62's review against another edition

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While I was reading this it seemed really familiar and I thought I had read this before. In fact, I'm sure I have. It is so well written though, that I just had to keep reading. I don't often reread, but if a book is well written, as is the case with this one, I will. It is definitely well worth the re-read.

jendoyleink's review against another edition

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4.0

Started out verrrryyy slow for me, but picked up after about five chapters. Felt a little more chick lit than romance (although, yes, that is a fine line) for most of the book. The pairing itself was good -- I did like Olivia a lot, and I loved Connor. The thing that I didn't like was that,
Spoilerthroughout the whole book we keep hearing about how Connor was the behind the most humiliating experience of Olivia's life -- and experience that has haunted her since it happened -- and then, after about 500 pages, it was resolved in two, and even those were partially indirect due to a conversation Olivia had with someone else. I wanted the resolution to cause sparks and tension between Olivia and Connor, not anyone else. And I wanted the making up that came with that.



SpoilerI was glad that at the end I got my romance HEA, but I wanted a little bit more togetherness there as well. Especially because the build-up was so much more thorough than in more conventionally sized romance books. Overall, however, I did enjoy the book and am looking forward to the next in the series.