Member Reviews

This is a heartwarming story perfect for those that enjoy the grump and sunshine trope.

Millie just wants to reunite the ashes of Mrs. Nash with her true love in Key West and Hollis, a cynical writer, is headed to Miami. Plans change when their flights are delayed. They decide to go on a road trip together to Florida.

It’s a poignant read about grief and love. Millie is a ball of sunshine with her quirky behaviors, and Hollis is a grump but he’s also dealing with his past. Their relationship is sweet. You also get a glimpse of Mrs. Nash’s life, falling in love in the past with a woman during the war. The stories of Mrs. Nash’s past and present with Millie and Hollis blended effortlessly. It was such a delightful read!

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I don’t really know what I expected going into this one, but it definitely wasn’t a woman (Millie) who made a promise to deliver the ashes of a dead woman (Mrs. Nash) to her long lost love (a woman she met nearly 80 years prior), but getting stranded and needed the assistance of an acquaintance (Hollis) of her former douche canoe of a boyfriend.

This book was an absolute riot. Millie and Hollis are absolute disasters when it comes to their own lives, but together, they are incredible. I loved their chemistry…and the steamy scenes (just sayin).

I also loved the flashbacks through the story where we see Mrs. Nash falling in love and having a relationship with Rose.

Overall, this is as a hilarious yet relatable romance that I can’t recommend enough!

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Oh my this one took me by surprise. It was delightful in so many ways.

Millie is a former child star just trying to live her life. After breaking up with her jackhole boyfriend, she moved in with her elderly neighbor, Mrs. Nash and they become besties. When Mrs. Nash passes, Millie heads off to Florida Mrs. Nash's ashes (quite literally) to reunite her with Eloise.
I loved the dual storyline including Rose and Eloise and their long standing love.

I loved Mille's quirky self, her funny sayings, her Pee Wee Herman references. I adored her musical choices and her seat dancing. She looked on the bright side of everything, looked for the good in people, and just made me smile! And Hollis, he was so grumpy to her sunshine, but you couldn't help but love his grumpy self - "a cinnamon roll hiding under a thick layer of burnt toast". Their banter was stellar and I was cheering so hard for cupid to strike them.

This one had it's romcom moments where you laughed out loud, and it's moments that made you tear up. LOVED!

Many thanks to NetGalley, Berkley Publishing and Let's Talk Books Promo for my gifted ARC and allowing me to be a part of this Berkley Buddy Read!

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Thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for the complimentary ARC. All opinions provided are my own.

Opposites attract road trip romance = love for me & Sarah Adler’s Mrs. Nash’s Ashes did not disappoint.

This author is so funny, you all. I was cracking up reading some of the heroine’s lines & the banter is a grumpy & the sunshine delight.

The book opens with Millie beginning a trip to Florida to bury part of her elderly best friend’s remains. Her flight plans fall through but luckily for her, Hollis Hollenbeck, who she vaguely knows through her ex, allows her to ride with him.

Hollis is by turns exasperated, bewildered, & turned on by Millie or Millicent, as he calls her. That is my favorite combo 😆.

I adore Millie, whose heart is wide open. & then I adored Hollis for adoring this about her in a confused, curmudgeonly, & fiercely protective way.

This book will grab hold of your heart & the dual storylines, telling Millie & Hollis’s story & Mrs. Nash & her lover’s, are done so well, pacing-wise.

The only thing that bothered me a bit about the book is the conflict, which really does go for the jugular, as Millie describes that type of fight. But I love how it wraps up & how they got there, & this is one of those books that gives all the feelings a la The Dead Romantics.

A lovely & celebratory portrayal of weirdness & love.

5 ⭐️. Out tomorrow!

Please see a trusted reviewer’s list of CWs.

[ID: Jess, a white woman wearing a multicolored striped skirt & a raspberry colored shirt that says “My weekend is all booked,” holds the ebook in front of a green tree.]

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Mrs. Nash's Ashes was such an enjoyable book! I absolutely loved this road trip full of misadventures and Millie & Hollis.

This is pure grump/sunshine with forced proximity and such fun witty banter in a wonderful story. When a starry-eyed romantic/former child star wants to bring the ashes of her elderly former friend to her one true love to reunite them after almost 80 years she finds herself on a road trip with a cynical writer on a trip from Washington DC to Key West after travel plans got messed up.

I loved the hijinks these two got into from the Italian-Mexican fusion restaurant to the small town festival and more. The only thing I had to laugh at was they made it seem like driving through Virginia took forever, it's really only 3 hours on 95, but I know Memorial Day traffic can be a bear. I avoid 95 at all costs 🤣

Definitely check out this cute rom-com. That delves a little deeper with grief, found family and regrets. Thanks to @berkleyromance got my copy on @netgalley. Mrs. Nash's Ashes comes out Tuesday - May 23rd.

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I was pleasantly surprised by this one!

Millicent is a romantic, an optimist and a former child star who doesn't mind interacting with fans as long as she doesn't have to read the comments. Mrs. Nash, her elderly friend and roommate, has passed away, and Millie is taking three tablespoons of her ashes to Key West in the hope of reuniting her with the woman she fell in love with eighty years ago during WWII. Even though Millie's been burned in relationships she still believes in a love that lasts forever.

When all flights to Florida get cancelled Millie teams up with Hollis Hollenbeck, a guy she's met a couple of times who's also stuck at the airport. Hollis is the pessimist to Millie's optimist. He's the grump to Millie's sunshine. As they embark on a D.C. to Key West road trip they both learn more about each other, but along the way learn more about themselves.

Hollis and Millie's chemistry is undeniable, with some great banter and laugh out loud moments. I really loved the glimpses of Mrs. Nash's past with Elsie, her friend and eventual love. Those snippets really helped underscore Millie's friendship with Mrs. Nash and gave credence to her cross-country journey.

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Thank you Netgalley and Berkley Publishing Group for access to this arc.


Grumpy/sunshine romances aren’t usually my thing but something about the mission that sunshine Millicent is on to try and “reunite” her best friend with that friend’s lost WWII love to give them their “HEA” struck a chord, and I happily took the chance to read it. It’s got a strong start with acerbic banter between Millie and Hollis, some amusing road incidents, and delves into character growth, then hit me with an ending I wasn’t quite expecting but which worked anyway. I do have a few reservations about Millie and Hollis’s various “making ups” though.

There are some lovely moments of Millie “seat dancing” to her playlist, a wonderful dinner at a Mexican/Italian fusion restaurant, some kind B&B owners who aren’t mocked (much but then that many Jesus paintings staring at you will you’re making hot love would be a bit much) for their religion, a conscientious highway patrolman, a wonderful husband for Rose who Understood, and an ending to the 40s love story I wasn’t expecting and to be honest initially had me saying “No!” as Millie did but when I think about it, I can live with it.

But then the Last Conflict arrives and it’s one I guessed was coming but hoped I’d be proved wrong. Nope – I called it. It’s intense and as bad for Millie as the Reason Hollis resisted love. And it’s something that I have doubts can be dealt with quite as easily as the scene on Boca Chica Beach seems to make it appear that it can. I do end up believing in these two but for that resolution … I just needed more and definitely more time. This is an insta-love romance and there’s a weird subplot about why Hollis is heading to Miami. Millie is made to have a rather porous verbal filter at times that can cause embarrassing scenes for her.

As for character growth – we have it, lots of it. Millie feels she needs to discover that long lasting, true love exists so that she can believe that she might one day find it. She also needs to figure out and act on another reason that is propelling her to make this journey. Hollis is initially not just the “cinnamon roll with a burnt toast coating” that Millie keeps trying to prove he is. There’s a Reason (and it’s actually a good one) for his disdain for twue wuv. We see their slow progress through actions rather than just being told. Hollis’s way of helping Millie with her restaurant ordering issue, the way they work out The Rules about sex (consent, safety, and communication), the way Hollis de-escalates an argument and keeps it from becoming a simmering Big Mis, Hollis revealing that he really doesn’t hate Millie’s music as much as he claims, and how Hollis affirms Millie.

But for all the issues I have with it, “Mrs. Nash’s Ashe’s” made me smile a lot. There’s enough funny, raunchy, and bittersweet to make it a very nice debut book. B

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4.5. I loved Mrs. Nash's Ashes, a deeply charming road trip romance following Millie, her quest to meet Mrs. Nash's lifelong love, and Hollis, her very reluctant partner in this chaotic journey. Millie was a very funny and likable lead, unapologetically quirky without the author overdoing it, and with an emotional depth and grief that gives the book its teary moments near the end. I'm not a crier, but Adler made me tear up at multiple moments on both Mrs. Nash and Millie's side. She and Hollis have a great grumpy/sunshine dynamic with banter and one-liners that made me laugh out loud throughout the book, but I also loved the growth and discovery of their relationship over the course of the story. I'd really love a peek at their lives when they return from this trip.

Instalove is not my favorite, but it bothered me less here than it often does, even if the book only took place over four days. I would have loved to see more of Mrs. Nash and her friendship with Millie, but I did enjoy the flashbacks to get to see a bit more of her life and love story. Otherwise, I really loved this debut from Sarah Adler.

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Mrs. Nash's Ashes by Sarah Adler

Former child actress, remembered fondly by many a boy for her TV appearance in a yellow bikini when she was fourteen, almost 30 year old Millicent Watts-Cohen would rather NOT be remembered for the show she starred in long ago. She wants to be liked for who she is now, not for her fourteen year old bathing suit clad body. She's a romantic at heart but she would rather have no romance than to be used for what she used to be.

Millie has some ashes to deliver but the trip gets to a rocky start as flights are cancelled just as she is about to board her flight. Scrambling to find a way to Key West from D.C, Millie is able to get a ride with extremely handsome and super curmudgeon-y Hollis Hollenbeck, a teacher and writer, who promises to be the grumpiest of travel partners. In reality, inner sparks are flying for both Millie and Hollis. Millie may be ready for her first casual hookup while it seems that is the only kind of romantic encounter Hollis has nowadays. Can these two opposites attract and then move on with their lives like nothing happened? Millie is sure Hollis can since that seems all he ever does, maybe on a very frequent basis, but she's not sure she's up to loving and moving on in such a way.

The attraction is instant, both Millie and Hollis are funny although Hollis can turn grumpy on a dime. What is with this guy!?! Interspersed with this story is that of Rosie and Elsie, Rosie being the the three tablespoons of ashes that Millie is carrying to their final resting spot in Key West. The romance is open door, the dialogue can be crude and vulgar but both Millie and Hollis seem to be enjoying themselves equally so what's the harm. Personally I like closed door much more than open door romance so this story leaned towards way too much information for me but I did enjoy the humor and the sweetness of the story.

Thank you to Berkley and NetGalley for this ARC.

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I absolutely adored this book!!
Millicent is a former child star turned Hollywood historical accuracy expert. Hollis is a writer. They had met through Millie’s jerk ex-boyfriend but a mass plane grounding puts them on a wild road trip to take Millie’s best friend/elderly roommate’s ashes to Key West. They meet an amazing cast of side characters as they go, and the reader learns a lot of interesting facts about broccoli.

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This was such a lovely road trip story, and I'm a sucker for even the loosest retellings of classic comedic films like It Happened One Night (which just so happens to be one of my all-time favourites.) The tale is fully updated here, with new motivations for the main characters, but it retains the opposites-attract central love story and the antic road trip plotline, with its quirky detours and delays, here including a broccoli parade and a bolder-than-necessary deer. Adler does a fabulous job with her banter and quick-to-spark attraction between her leads. It's a classic grumpy/sunshine pairing, one that's fleshed out with grounded motivations for the characterizations, and a self-aware exploration of the trope itself. The sex is sexy but also emotional, which I loved. Every intimacy built the relationship, deftly weaving lust and love. I also appreciated the discussion of women being used to forward men's stories, when every woman is the center of her own story. Told with wit and heart, it's a road trip that'll make you laugh, and take you on a joyful journey, but one that will also invert your expectations at the perfect moments. Beautifully told, full of warmth and subtle wisdom that make the story resonate well after finishing the final page.

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This was a beautiful story about grief, friendship and love. I loved the flashbacks with Mrs Nash in the war. The present day road trip was fun to read about as well. This book was wonderful!

Thank you NetGalley for the eARC in exchange for an honest review.

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Mr. Grump and Ms. Sunshine won my heart in this romance.

Millicent, a former child star, sees everything through such innocent eyes, and finds kindness in every situation. After a terrible break-up, she moves-in with Mrs. Nash, to aid in her care. The elderly women and Millicent become fast friends. Its only during her final days that Mrs. Nash confesses to loving a women killed in the Korean War.

Millicent is determined to reunite lost loves after finding Mrs. Nash's lover survived, and is living in a nursing home in Florida. Armed with her backpack, she sets out with Mrs. Nash's Ashes to deliver one final grand gesture of love. Only the airlines have other plans and grounds ALL flights out of D.C.

Hollis, a curmudgeon, roles up with a car to save-the-day. Unbeknownst to her, Hollis has had a crush on her since finding her in a coffee shop many years ago but is friend swooped and sweep her off her feet. This same friend is the one who betrayed her trust, and has left her heartbroken.

Together, they set out on a road trip from D.C. to Miami thats fueled with laugh out loud moments. The map to their destination takes a detour when they realize their feelings. This contemporary romance was such a heartwarming delight and I will recommend to many.

I will defiantly be looking for other books under this author's pen. Thank you Berkley Publishing for the complimentary copy.

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After breaking up with her long term boyfriend, Millie moves in with her elderly neighbor Mrs. Nash. They become fast friends, and Mrs Nash shares her greatest love story with Millie. Upon Mrs. Nash's death, Millie is determined to reunite her ashes with her great love.

After major flight fiascos, Millie ends up stuck with travel companion Hollis. Not only is Hollis a grump, but he also is friends with her ex.

This book was soooo funny. Seriously laugh out loud funny. Millie finds herself in some awkward situations and her no filter mouth doesn't help matters.

I enjoyed the flashbacks to Mrs Nash's youth, as you really get invested in her story, but it never takes away from Millie and Hollis. This is talented story telling

I absolutely adored this grumpy sunshine story.

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Mrs. Nash’s Ashes is a fun, quick little comedy of romantic error about an ex-child star who heads to the Florida Keys to do her beloved landlady one more favor – only to find true love along the way.

Rose McIntyre Nash passed away at the age of ninety-eight, but her full life is about to collide with an active afterlife. Millicent Watts-Cohen - who had been Mrs. Nash’s caretaker, lived in her home and was her close friend – is given permission by her son to take a few tablespoons of her ashes with her when she departs on her travels. It turns out Millicent has been tasked with a very important thing – she is to take this small portion of Rose to the Florida Keys and deliver them to Elise, the love of Rose’s life.

Former child star Millicent – who portrayed time-traveling Penelope Stuart in the Disney-esque Penelope to the Past, has settled into adulthood by avoiding her past and the awkwardness it surrounds her with – such as creepy guys her own age blatantly telling her - in public - about how she provided them with their sexual awakening. Millicent, meanwhile, just hopes that the journey will help renew her belief in love. Rose’s story of falling in love with Elsie during World War II – only for them to be separated by the Korean War – has long been a romantic touchstone for Millicent. Her recent discovery that Elsie didn’t die in the war but is still alive did not reach Rose before she passed, making reuniting the lovers, however she can, a major mission for her.

But more awkwardness arrives in the form of Hollis Hollenbeck, who was in the same MA program as Millicent and whom she despised – and who despised her in return. Hollis is headed to Florida for a sex-date he hopes will break him out of his writer’s block. Millicent and Hollis got on like oil and water back then, and she doesn’t anticipate anything changing during their flight to the Keys. Unfortunately a glitch grounds their flight, so they become temporary reluctant travel buddies.

Interspersed with Millicent and Hollis’ love story is that of Elsie and Rose. While Rose and Elsie’s connection is more dramatic and told with a tear in the eye, Millicent and Hollis’ connection combines humor with flashes of drama. I’m a sucker for road trips, and between broccoli festivals and meals and walks on the beach, they unpeel their armor and manage to find middle ground. It’s a rewarding journey.

There’s a lot of heat between the two of them, even though Hollis absolutely starts the book as a shallow, sex-obsessed type who has to evolve toward opening himself to love. And hoo, the book earns that hot rating!

I liked Millicent immediately, and I really sympathized with both her need to find something real and her attempt at trying to find something important in life.

This is both a very human book with a very touching narrative and a comedy of errors. There’s a wonderful, cinematic tone to Adler’s writing that keeps the reader engaged and flipping the pages. Her style is calm and assured beyond her experience – this happens to be her first novel. Hopefully Mrs. Nash’s Ashes signals that she will write many more.

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This book! What a debut! From the opening chapter I knew this was going to be the BEST read. I have to say, Hollis uses one of my favorite meet cute lines ever!

“Sure. I know I never leave my house without my wallet, keys, phone, and a dimebag of cremains.”

Mrs. Nash’s Ashes is a love story within a love story with the best roadtrip playlist and characters that are instantly likable and fun.

Hollis is grumpy and gruff, in the words of the author, “a cinnamon roll hiding under a thick layer of burnt toast.” Millie is sunshine and rainbows and quirkiness and the two of them together is the perfect combination. They’re banter had me laughing out loud and their chemistry had me swooning. Adler’s writing is the best slow burn with so much heart and I know this one is going to be a hit of the summer! I cannot wait to see what Adler writes next! I highly recommend it!

4.75 stars!

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This was such a sweet and delightful read! The first line of the synopsis immediately caught my attention, it doesn’t get much quirkier than a road trip that includes the ashes of an elderly woman. I loved the sunshine and grump thing between Millie and Hollis so much but Millie really stole the show for me. She’s such a ball of sunshine, a true romantic at heart and her sense of humor and eccentric behavior was so much fun. It made me laugh but I also loved the author’s portrayal of grief and how not everything here was wrapped up in a shiny package. Overall an uplifting and heartwarming read.

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#MrsNashsAshes:⁣

Thank you @prhaudio @berkleyromance for my copies! #PRHAudioPartner #BerkleyPartner ⁣

“you’re inevitable, Millicent. It’s like you tied my shoelaces together the moment we met and the knot’s only getting tighter the longer I try to outrun you.”⁣

This was another fun one that had me craving the salty sea air and a great love story. Told by our unique MC, Millicent Watts-Cohen, former child star, we go on an adventure of self discovery and closure to her dear friend. ⁣

I really loved the flashbacks of Elsie and Rose. I loved hearing Rose’s wise words to Millicent while they were roommates. She’s truly one of a kind and a great person to write. I really enjoyed their “one car” as Millicent and Hollis were stuck on this road trip together.⁣

I will say, the spice came out of nowhere and it became a major focal point. Now, there’s nothing wrong with that, but the beginning of the book really set the tone for the deep conversations and once the spice happened, that took a back seat.⁣

Overall, a good summer read to really get you in the mood for summer. Highly recommend the audio as it’s such a good listen! Mrs. Nash’s Ashes is out 5/23! ⁣

QOTD: If you could travel to anyplace in the world for one day, where would you go?

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Sarah Adler’s debut novel, Mrs. Nash’s Ashes, is fun, quirky and sweet. It is filled with all the good stuff: Bad break-ups, multi-generational friendships, roadtrips gone awry, and smart banter between a grumpy author and a super sunny historian.

While capturing the traditional “everything that can go wrong, will go wrong” roadtrip, Ms. Adler also gives readers a lovely, slow-build romance and a story within a story. Some might think, there’s too much crammed into this book, but Ms. Adler manages it all beautifully. Former child star, Millicent, tells her traveling companion, Hollis, the story of her beloved neighbor turned roommate, Mrs. Nash, and her long ago, taboo love affair with Elsie. I appreciated the significance of Mrs. Nash and Elsie’s story, but I was more interested in Millicent and Hollis’ story. Ms. Adler blended the perfect amount of humor, quirk, and friendliness to make the characters’ banter and budding romance believable.

Mrs. Nash’s Ashes is a delightful read that is sure to be a beach-read hit this summer.

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This was an entertaining story about Millie and Hollis going on a road trip to Florida. They fall in love over the span of 4 days, which was ehh to me. Im not a huge fan of instant love. I also found myself more invested in Hollis anD Millie’s story than Elsie and Rose’s. Im also not the biggest fan of grumpy to sunshine trope. So all the tropes in this one didn’t really work over me. Overall, it was okay.

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