Review by Booklist Review
Adams' follow-up to her debut novel, The Godmother (2007), again features Tessa King, a music-company lawyer, single and pushing forty, who thinks she has finally found her soul mate. James has been divorced for four years, and spends Wednesdays and weekends with his three daughters, none of whom is interested in seeing their dad remarry, especially 14-year-old Amber. Over and above that problem, their seemingly perfect mother, Bea, still seems to love James, though she was the one to initiate the divorce. Adams takes the reader through a year of the ups and downs of Tessa's relationship with James and his daughters the bribery she employs to win the girls' acceptance, the not-so-warm reactions she gets from Bea's fiercely loyal friends, and her struggle to balance stepmotherhood with the demands of her high-powered job. With Bea's alcohol problem, the worsening of Tessa's mother's multiple sclerosis, and Tessa's dad's sudden death, Adams injects her romantic soap opera with large dollops of pathos, culminating in a fairy-tale ending to this enjoyable and uplifting read.--Donovan, Deborah Copyright 2009 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Adams follows up 2006's The Godmother with a perceptive chick noir, once again debunking the notion that everything's smooth sailing once you've found the love of your life. Tessa King (heroine of Adams's first novel) has finally nabbed hers: James, an older man with three charming daughters from a previous marriage. These daughters--including daddy's girl extraordinaire, 14-year-old Amber--don't seem so lovely once stepmother-in-waiting Tessa has to deal with their dirty school uniforms and petty jealousies. Nor did Tessa sign up for the emotional baggage of James's ex-wife, Bea, who broke James's heart. With all the angst, how's a girl supposed to plan the perfect white wedding? Meanwhile, Bea--who shares narration duty--still has a torch burning for James and has buried years of regret and guilt under binge eating and, soon, compulsive drinking. Family dramas and crises bring Bea and Tessa together with surprising results. Particularly refreshing are Tessa's and Bea's co-starring roles, which allows Adams to explore in sometimes painful detail how the real work begins once you've got the diamond ring. Fans of Marian Keyes and Emily Giffin will enjoy Adams's engrossing second outing. (Mar.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
Bea, a divorced mother of three daughters, is overweight, drinks too much, and has issues with her mother. Tessa, a successful lawyer, is single, pushing 40, and beautiful. Unfortunately, they are both in love with the same man, Bea's ex, Jimmy, whom Tessa calls James. The names are just the beginning of the differences in their relationships. When James introduces Tessa to his daughters, the little girls are easygoing, but the 14-year-old seems a bit difficult. Tessa has great friends and amazing parents to ask for advice, and by taking their advice, using her godchildren as foils, and bribing the kids, she manages to earn their grudging respect. Meanwhile, Bea's life is sliding downhill rapidly. When disaster strikes, the whole family pulls together to work things out-but that leaves Tessa out in the cold. Or does it? Alternating between Tessa's and Bea's viewpoints, this fun sequel to The Godmother is a well-written, punchy fairy tale of a story. Highly recommended for all public libraries.-Stacy Alesi, Palm Beach Cty. Lib. Syst., Boca Raton, FL (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
In this sequel to The Godmother (2007), British author Adams coasts from chick lit to mother-hen lit. Although Bea, 42, chose to break up her marriage to Jimmy, she still loves him. While they were married Bea worked as a journalist, but, with her mother's financial help, she has been able to stay home with her three daughters since the divorce. Everyone with whom Bea has remained close, including Jimmy and his family, considers her a perfect mother, but overweight Bea is desperately lonely and unhappy. Just as she finds the courage to tell Jimmy she wants to try again, she learns about Tessa, Jimmy's new love (Tessa calls him James). In her late 30s, Tessa is a slim and relatively glamorous record-company lawyer, but she's also devoted to her friends' children and less secure than she might appear. She assumes Bea is a superwoman/mom and struggles mightily to find a place for herself in James/Jimmy's children's lives. The younger two are emotionally open but 14-year-old Amber, torn by her mixed loyalties to her parents, resists. At first Bea wins readers' sympathies and Tessa seems the interloper, but the roles become less clear cut as Tessa genuinely embraces the children while Bea embraces a "miracle diet" which consists of eating nothing while drinking to unconsciousness. Amber, who has begun an innocent romance with Tessa's 17-year-old godson Caspar, covers for Bea until a crisis in Tessa's parents' lives brings Bea's secrets out into the open. Tessa learns the truth behind Bea's divorce: post-abortion guilt, offered as a less-than-convincing excuse for Bea's alcoholism. Newly self-sacrificing Tessa sends James/Jimmy back to an already reformed Bea to sort out their relationship once and for all. Not to worry, he is quick to realize that there is "love" and then there is "in love." The platitudes and occasional preaching go down pretty smoothly thanks to Adams's sharp but good-natured wit. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.