Sylvie Fairchild rose to moderate fame four years ago as a popular contestant on the hit baking show, Operation Cake. The moment she both ended her time on the show and immortalised herself on the internet forever was when her sparkly unicorn cake went horribly wrong and hit icy and arrogant baking judge Dominic De Vere got a sparkly hoof straight in the forehead.
Now Sylvie has fulfilled her dream of running a bakery, Sugar Fair, in one of the hottest locations in Notting Hill, right across from De Vere’s revered establishment and while they are about as different as two people can be in terms of baking choices, flavours, decorations or style, they are both determined to compete to be the bakery that gets to bake the wedding cake for the upcoming royal wedding of the king’s granddaughter. They are also both judges on the most recent season of Operation Cake.
Dominic might find Sylvie’s constant bubbliness and whimsy exasperating, and while she makes taste and decoration choices he finds preposterous, he can’t deny her skill as a baker, pastry chef, and businesswoman. Sylvie has never denied finding Dominic good-looking, even when he was the judge on Operation Bake who was the most annoyed by her fantastical and glitter-covered creations. Now, spending more time with him, both on set at Operation Bake, not to mention constantly running into him as they both do research for their potential wedding cakes, she discovers that he certainly doesn’t seem to be as unfeeling and cold as she believed and that they may have more in common than she first thought.
I am a huge fan of Parker’s previous romances, most of the books in her London Celebrities are excellent. In this book, she’s set her books in a slightly alternate present, with a completely different royal family, hence a king on the throne and his gothy granddaughter soon to be married. This romance also has protagonists that both struggle with processing grief in different ways, and Dominic in particular struggles with the aftermath of emotional abuse of his childhood, which is still impacting his relationship with his perky younger sister.
Full review on my blog.
Bingo #3: Free! (Hør Her’a!), People (Any Where the Wind Blows), Self Care (this), Mythic (Neon Gods), Book Club (Meddling Kids)
Bingo#4: Pandemic (The Professor Next Door, They She He (One Last Stop), Self Care (this), Gateway (Paper Girls, vol 1), Rep (Broken – in the best possible way)