Sunday, April 7, 2024

A Slow Burn Dance into Contemporary Romance

 

Image copied from Goodreads


For the month of April I will be focusing on straight, contemporary romance reads. By that I mean these will be novels set in a realistic contemporary world with no elements of fantasy or the paranormal in them. My first pick for this month is Slow Dance by Rainbow Rowell, which comes out this July. I would say Slow Dance is a steamy, contemporary adult romance. It is also a stand alone novel, not part of a series.

I have long been a fan of Rainbow Rowell. I loved Eleanor and Park and Fangirl.  I enjoyed the Simon Snow novels inspired by the fan fiction in Fangirl. I will also admit that Slow Dance is the first adult novel of Rowell's that I've read. This novel bears all the hallmarks of a Rainbow Rowell novel, complicated characters with difficult backstories and life situations. However, it is an interesting mix of adult and young adult novel. It revolves around Shiloh, a young, thirty-something divorcee with two kids and Cary, her former best friend. The two are brought together after fourteen years by the marriage of their mutual best friend Mikey.

Here are the things I love about this book. First, I love that Rowell seems to make it seem effortless to depict characters whose lives are messy, who don't have it all figured out, who had life goals only some of which they've achieved. I love that Shiloh is both protective of the life she has built for herself but also embarrassed by it. On the one hand, she is raising her two kids and sharing custody of them with her ex-husband, while also feeling she's taken a step backwards by moving in with her mom. Shiloh enjoys her job working at the local Children's Theatre, but also feels she has to apologize for it because it means she's traded living in her hometown for what could have been a bigger life pursuing a stage career for herself. It is so realistic of what life can be, a mix of pride at what you have carved out for yourself while still feeling you need to apologize to the wider world for not being what the world sees as a breakout hit or success. Yet, as Shiloh grows and changes throughout the story, her growing realization of what brings happiness makes her less apologetic and instead proud. Proud to admit her love for her best friend and proud to take a chance at building a life with him where they can be happy. 

I also loved that Cary is everything wonderful in a love interest, loyal, tender, willing to listen, but also complicated, sometimes surly, and often clueless about articulating his feelings. When he finally decides to risk giving his heart to Shiloh again, the results of that are messy, uncertain and unexpected. But Rowell still manages to make the moment tender and heartbreaking in the best way. Cary, unlike Shiloh, left home and never expected to look back. He's made a career for himself just as he set out to do in the Navy. However, he has still retained his ties to his mother, who is actually his grandmother, and has never stopped looking out for her and taking care of her. In spite of her mistakes, in spite of all the people she brought into his life, all the siblings, step-siblings, half-siblings, cousins she's always taking in and caring for, adding to the people, by extension, Cary has to care for or worry about. In this way, both Cary and Shiloh understand each other on a deep level as both come from broken homes with mother's who made questionable choices. I also like that each of the moms own up to their mistakes to some degree, but also don't apologize for living their life the way they wanted. Again, it is genuine and makes them fully fleshed secondary characters because they are messy, flawed and yet supportive and loving toward their children, though Shiloh's mom is much less maternal and nurturing than Cary's. 

What makes this book an interesting blend of adult and young adult is the fact that it is told through a mix of chapters set in the current timeline for the adult versions of the characters with flashback chapters of the teen versions of the characters. At least half of the novel is made up of chapters about the before versions of Shiloh and Cary. Some even give alternate points of view of the same parts of the story from the other character's viewpoint. So, for example, one set of chapters told from Cary's point of view after bootcamp is later retold from Shiloh's viewpoint. It was a surprise to me that the story was told this way. I will admit that while I think that Rowell was able to pull it off overall, at times, I was frustrated to have to read some of these before chapters. I felt that there were times when I could have done without some of them and would have preferred to see some of that information worked into the current timeline for the adults instead. I was most invested in the storyline for Cary and Shiloh as adults and while I do think some of the before chapters are important to understand the roadblocks that exist between Cary and Shiloh as grownups and to understand why they've not be in touch for so long after being so close as teens, I still wish there had been fewer before chapters. I felt that for me, they slowed the pacing down for the story and made it longer than it needed to be. That is the main reason I give this a 4 out of 5 stars. That may be a pet peeve for me though, and some will likely feel differently. 

If you like contemporary romance with compelling, realistic characters, then I highly recommend reading Slow Dance. I did enjoy it and I found the love story between Cary and Shiloh to be touching, and heartbreakingly beautiful. I was very pleased to be given the chance to read an ARC of this book by NetGalley and Harper Collins Publishers in exchange for this honest review.

Stay tuned for my next review in a couple of weeks of a young adult/new adult contemporary romance by Kristy Boyce entitled Hot Dutch Daydream which is a follow up novel to Hot British Boyfriend. Click on the titles for links to Goodreads for blurbs on either of these books.

Images copied from Goodreads
                        

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