Thursday, 24 December 2020

Review: Best Made Plans

Best Made Plans Best Made Plans by Jessica Hart
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Three and a half stars.

This is the second in a series of four books written by different authors centring around the marriage of an English woman called Hope Kennard to Jonas Reval, the Prince of a small country called San Michele. Max is Hope's older brother and owner of Hasebury Hall in Wiltshire, since he inherited the property he has done his best to extricate the family from the financial difficulties caused by their profligate/criminal father. He's just about solvent but the announcement that his sister wants to get married in the local church and have the reception at Hasebury Hall has thrown a spanner in the works. Max will do anything for his little sister but this is going to stretch him financially and socially.

Flora Deare is a renowned chef, particularly of pastries and one of Hope's best friends, usually based in London she came home to look after her grandparents until they died, running her cake business from their cramped kitchen. She has been chosen to cater the royal wedding and to facilitate matters she has moved her business into the Hall's spacious kitchens. Flora has always had a crush on Max but a curly-haired, curvaceous chef can't compare to the cool, leggy, ex-models like his wife that Max is used to date.

Max is a harassed, somewhat grumpy, single dad (can you say that if the children generally live with the mother?), drawn against his will to the effervescent Flora, distributor of real coffee and creator of delicious cakes, who lights up his gloomy Hall.

Flora feels like a frumpy, short, troll compared with the procession of sophisticated women that Max's ex-wife sets him up with, but she can't help but feel a frisson of something every time they get close.

When Hope tells Max he must have a plus-one for the wedding and pre-wedding celebrations in San Michele what could be simpler than going with Flora? And faking a relationship to satisfy Jonas' uptight sister-in-law isn't difficult? But with Max set on living in Wiltshire and Flora determined to return to London can this opposites-attract romance get off the ground?

I had a Kindle full of NetGalley ARCs to be read, plus loads of other books but after Saturday afternoon's announcement of London going into Tier 4 COVID restrictions (effectively cancelling my plans for Christmas Dinner with my parents), I was looking for something comforting, something gentle and life-affirming, and this was just the ticket.

Recommended if you are looking for a opposites-attract romance set in a picturesque village, with a royal wedding thrown in.

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