Member Reviews
A pleasant, easy read, where nothing out of the ordinary happens, and there's no real angst even though the main characters think they have issues standing in their way, yet they get together easily enough. I think Zoe and Nate were a bit too good to be true. Lovely setting. I think the epilogue could have been better (if indeed one was even needed) - it was too predictable.
With thanks to NetGalley and the author and publisher for an ARC in an exchange for an honest review.
Thanks to Canelo and NetGalley for a copy of this book. An excellent light read. A romantic tale told in a lovely setting. The storyline is interesting and the book has many interesting characters whose stories are woven into that of the main heroine and hero. Recommend this book to any lover of this genre who wants to sit down and have a relaxing read for a few hours.
Zoe bought the diner and moved to the cove to escape her past. Nate is leaving the cove to go off and travel. They have both lived there for years, but never really got to know each other, and once they do there is chemistry they can't ignore.
Both are character who are likeable and you want a happy ending for them.
It is nice that characters from the previous books are included in the story line too.
I really loved this book! Excellent story with brilliant main characters. I would recommend this book.
I love Darcie Boleyn's books and really enjoy the predictability of the romantic plots and the happy endings. She writes the kind of books that leave you fuzzy inside and feel like a hopeless romantic. The kind of book that cheers you up on a dreary day, or an easy read when you're lazing by the hotel pool. I've read a handful, and as I've read two others in the Conwenna Cove series I thought it would be nice to read this one. Unfortunately, I found 'Forever at Conwenna Cove' to be a carbon copy of the previous two books. Same plot, two hopeless romantics that have given up hope, with an obstacle or two in their way, eventually get together and live happily ever after. The characters are all the same as the previous books (which can get a little confusing, as having already read the first-person accounts from the other characters, it's confusing to read them as background characters and remember how they fit in), and with a little place like Conwenna Cove, not much changes. I had hope that there would be some vast differences in this book, as I also found the second book was far too similar to the first; unfortunately not. It feels like the same book has been written three times over with only the character names and life stories switched out. As much as I love Darcie's writing style, I'm already over this series now.