Review by Booklist Review
Grey's debut adult novel will break readers' hearts, taking them on an emotional ride but leaving them feeling hopeful. The love story of Kate and Cam unfolds in an alternating series of flashbacks, through to the present day. Kate and Cam are soulmates and have loved each other forever, but they are exhausted with raising their young child. Just as Kate decides to get back into the workforce, she finds out that she is pregnant again. Kate thought this unplanned pregnancy would derail their lives, but instead, Cam is diagnosed with early, rapid Alzheimer's disease. With all of the stress of Cam's diagnosis, Kate loses the baby. While their lives are thrown up in the air, Kate's new boss, Hugh, provides a level of understanding and friendship that Kate and Cam did not expect. He becomes Cam's best friend and is Kate's support system through it all. While readers may expect the twist, the delivery of the romance is extremely satisfying. Grey's eloquent writing about the loss of a partner will create an ache in readers' hearts. This tearjerker will make readers cheer for the joyful ending. Anyone who has enjoyed Cecilia Ahern's novels will love The Last Love Note.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Australian writer Grey makes her U.S. debut with a clever if underwhelming story about a young widow who considers a new love. Aspiring novelist Kate Whittaker, 40, juggles her responsibilities as a single mother with her fund-raising job at a university. She attempts to handle her burdens with humor (her phone's ringtone for her intrusive mother is the "Imperial March" from Star Wars), and receives support from her bachelor boss, Hugh, a family friend (Kate's young son calls him "Uncle Hugh") who has accommodated her rocky performance since her husband, Cam, died two years earlier from early-onset Alzheimer's. She begins to develop romantic feelings for Hugh, but wonders if she can have a future with him after discovering he kept a secret from her about Cam's wishes for Kate after his death. Grey, who writes in an author's note about losing her husband to a heart attack at a similar age, convincingly portrays a sense of loss. After a while, however, Kate's grief begins to feel disharmonious with the otherwise fast-paced rom-com plot, and it's obvious from the get-go where her relationship with Hugh is headed. The writing is crisp, though, and there's a smart metafictional element involving Kate deciding to give up her lofty literary ambitions and write what matters most to her. This has its charms. (Nov.)
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved