CBR16 Sweet Books: Exciting (I’ve been looking forward to this for a long time, and was VERY excited to get an ARC shortly before the release date.
Nowhere Bingo: A book with multiple POVs
This was an audio ARC from NetGalley. My opinions are my own.
When Aurora “Rory” Evans was a lonely teenager, she ran into a handsome Canadian hockey player while she was selling coffee at the Mall of America. She took his name and pretended to have an actual Canadian boyfriend, making her loneliness and ostracism seem more bearable, because even if she had been invited to things, she wouldn’t have been able to come, since she was probably visiting her boyfriend, in Canada. And obviously, he couldn’t come to school dances or her ballet recitals, living in Canada and all. To keep up the ruse, she also wrote her fictional boyfriend long letters, basically making them a sort of journal for some difficult years in her life.
Now an adult, having given up on ballet as it was making her sick, Aurora works as a dance teacher in a small town. She still struggles with her years of disordered eating, and occasionally gets panic attacks, but she’s doing a lot better and enjoys teaching children the joys of dance. To her great surprise, the tragically widowed Mike Martin, whose daughter comes back to dance classes after some time away (what with the grief and the dead mum and soforth), is none other than the handsome young man she took as inspiration for her fake boyfriend. To her credit, it takes her a while to confirm to herself that the Mike she met as a teenager and this Mike are the same person, but even when she does, she doesn’t tell him the truth about her teenage coping mechanism.
Mike loved his wife and is still dealing with a lot of emotions after her sudden death in a car accident. Olivia, Rory’s dance student, is his step-daughter and while he’s the only father she’s ever known, he’s had to fight his parents-in-law for custody, which hasn’t exactly made the grieving process easier. It’s clear that Olivia adores her father, but she’s also a tween who lost her mother and is prone to tantrums and sudden outbursts. Dance classes with “Miss Rory” are one of her favourite things. Mike likes that Aurora doesn’t fawn over him (unlike many of the dance mums) and he sees the easy rapport she has with Olivia, and when he discovers that Aurora is working multiple jobs to make ends meet, offers to hire her to be Olivia’s sort-of nanny while he’s off resuming his hockey career.
So the romance here takes a while to develop. Aurora is keeping the secret that she basically used Mike as a template for a fantasy boyfriend for a long time as a teenager, a truth that becomes more difficult to tell the longer she knows him and the closer they become. Mike is also Aurora’s employer (she refuses to take a paycheck, but lives in his basement, has access to a car whenever she needs it, and gets health insurance) for a lot of the book, which certainly complicates the situation between them somewhat. Mike also feels like he can’t date again until his daughter is older, possibly even until after she’s old enough to move out. He doesn’t feel like he can introduce a new woman into her life, in case they break up and she would have to deal with losing another person. When they do finally decide to become more than friends, they do address the employer/employee complication, so it’s very much not a case of anyone being exploited or taken advantage of.
Full review here.