Member Reviews

What did I just read? Mad, funny, sad in places, all at the same time.

The author took a well worn, much loved tale and gave it a new and fresh spin, and made it into a believable paranormal romance.

I love a grumpy MC, and Evan is one of the grumpiest, foul-mouths I've met in a long time. As for Phil... aww, bless him, he really should have read the manual.

A quick read, but still a satisfying romance in under 100 pages.

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What did I just read? Mad, funny, sad in places, all at the same time.

The author took a well worn, much loved tale and gave it a new and fresh spin, and made it into a believable paranormal romance.

I love a grumpy MC, and Evan is one of the grumpiest, foul-mouths I've met in a long time. As for Phil... aww, bless him, he really should have read the manual.

A quick read, but still a satisfying romance in under 100 pages.

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I've had a string of mediocre books recently, but then Just in Time comes along and reminds me of how fecking enjoyable books can be again!

I haven't read Jacqueline Rohrbach before now, but she is on my radar forever more. Just in Time was funny as hell, and actually worked as a romance in under 75 pages.

The story was a cute, irreverent holiday tale. I am a sucker for a curmudgeon MC, and I loved how grumpy Evan was at the start. It was really fun to watch him with the clueless Phil. I laughed out loud at parts, and I couldn't put it down.

Maybe not everyone's cup of tea, but I found Just in Time to be smart, light, holiday goodness.

*Copy provided in exchange for an honest review*

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"Just in Time" is a quirky retelling of Charles Dicken's famous Christmas Carol with a new addition to the ghosts of Past, Present and Future --- the Ghost of Imaginary Time. So what exactly is the Ghost of Imaginary Time, or as he calls himself Phil? As Phil explains:

"Everyone wants to be understood, I suppose. But my gig, my true gig, is that no one can. Past helps humans deal with their trauma, Present helps them cope with reality, Future gives them something to change. I make you face up to the fact that you don't know shit."

Still not sure what that exactly means? Well how about ....

"Think of me as an imaginary number, a placeholder for the impossible. That's me. I don't have a defined beginning or end. I'm not clean cut and simple like Past, Present and Future. Some words are like that, too. They're placeholders for everyone we can't imagine but imagine all the time. Love, for example."

Yeah. Well. Anyhoo ... Human Evan is a cold-hearted bastard and when Past, Present and Future fail to get him to reform, Phil gets to try his hand. And sure, if Phil had taken the time to read the human manual, he would have known things ... helpful things like how to NOT freak out people by smiling creepily all the time or offering them candy he has unwrapped to streamline the eating process.

But as Phil spends more time with Evan, he realizes the danger - if he acts more human, he'll become more human and soon he's an "I love you" away from becoming fully human. There is love and redemption and a new life in store for both Evan and Phil as the story ends, but I didn't really feel any chemistry between the two, and while their HEA is well deserved, it seems at odds with the first part of the story. Also, I'm still not sure exactly what the Ghost of Imaginary Time is! 3.5 stars.

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