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A SMILE IN A WHISPER

An often charming tale of youth, forgiveness, and second chances.

Awards & Accolades

Our Verdict

  • Our Verdict
  • GET IT

In Middleton’s novel, an old romance is rekindled when two ex-lovers face their past.

Thirty-one-year-old Evie Sutherland, who suffers from Crohn’s disease, lives a quiet life in the Orkney Islands in Scotland. She runs her parents’ tourist shop and café, does genealogical research for tourists, and writes romance novels under a pen name. Her dating life, on the other hand, is rather complicated, partly due to her self-consciousness about her illness and partly because she’s still not over her breakup with her first love—a famous London actor named Nick Balfour who used to spend summers on the island—even though it happened 13 years ago. When an accident at her parents’ shop injures the cook handling a catering job for a new TV production filming in town, Evie must take over, putting her in frequent contact with one of the executive producers—none other than Nick himself. The story is told through Evie’s and Nick’s third-person perspectives in different chapters and takes place in two different timelines. The earlier narrative unfolds mostly over teenage summers; Evie is 13 the first time she meets 16-year-old Nick and 18 when they break up. Middleton shows a real knack for creating realistic and deeply developed characters. Secondary players, such as Evie’s childhood friends Sunita Kumari and Fiona Groundwater, are vibrant, stable parts of her life, but are well developed in their own right. Nick’s private struggles with panic attacks, career mishaps, and a complicated relationship with his mother ground him as a character and make him sympathetic, as well. When the pair are reunited in the present day, it’s clear they both still have feelings for each other, and readers will want to find out what happened between them more than a decade ago—and hope to see them back together again.

An often charming tale of youth, forgiveness, and second chances.

Pub Date: Aug. 10, 2023

ISBN: 9781999275341

Page Count: 372

Publisher: Kirkwall Books

Review Posted Online: July 6, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2023

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JUST FRIENDS

A romance that could have used significant rethinking.

Childhood friends, almost-sweethearts, a misunderstanding, and a funeral.

Blair Lang and Declan Renshaw were best friends who went on one date before a disagreement and an accident sent them in different directions after high school. Now Blair is back from college to be with her great-aunt Lottie, who’s dying, and to support her single mother in small-town Seabrook, California. Finding a job at a coffee shop puts her in the path of her former boyfriend, since he turns out to be its owner. Can the two get past their mistakes? The novel uses the popular second-chance romance trope, but Pham fails to energize it through interesting characters. Blair’s grief over her great-aunt’s death and her plan to help her mother are overshadowed by internal monologues about her feelings, the way her friends aren’t paying attention to her, and the novel she plans to write. Declan’s distinguishing characteristic, besides being a former high school quarterback, is his skill at building birdhouses. Unsurprisingly, the couple doesn’t have much chemistry; when they embrace, their “bodies meld like…memory foam.” The wooden characters, unusual word choices (“conglomerate of pedestrians,” “litany of plants”), and odd turns of phrase (“tension melting from his eyebrows like butter melting in a warm pan”) are almost enough to obscure the lack of plot development. What passes for stakes is easily defused when Blair comes into an inheritance that saves her from working as a consultant at Ernst & Young in New York—so she can write a romance novel.

A romance that could have used significant rethinking.

Pub Date: March 3, 2026

ISBN: 9781668095188

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Atria

Review Posted Online: Feb. 16, 2026

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2026

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CHERRY BABY

Rowell delivers the requisite happily-ever-after, but it doesn’t quite satisfy.

A second-chance romance from the author of Slow Dance (2024) and the Simon Snow Trilogy.

Cherry is fat. There are other things to know about Cherry, but this fact is essential to how she sees herself and—she knows—essential to how other people see her. And now that her husband’s hugely popular webcomic is a movie, she not only has to endure people confusing her with the character that’s based on her, but also the knowledge that the actor playing this character is wearing a fat suit. This pain is exacerbated by the fact that her marriage is over. It’s at this rock-bottom moment that her college crush reenters her life…This is a book about being fat, and Rowell does a great job of depicting what internalized fatphobia looks like. “Cherry was so used to thinking about being fat, she hardly even noticed that she was doing it. She was so used to thinking about being fat, she never thought about it.” Observations like this will resonate with a lot of readers, as will Cherry’s complicated feelings about weight-loss drugs. This is also a romance and, as a romance, it’s kind of all over the place. It’s totally realistic for Cherry to wonder if Russ—the guy from college—never pursued her because of her weight. This is a conflict that feels true. What’s less believable is the way he reacts when he sees a trailer for Cherry’s husband’s movie. It’s clear that he didn’t get that this movie was going to be a blockbuster. In short, Russ freaks out, and it’s not at all clear why. As for Cherry’s husband, the way she feels about him at the beginning of the book is totally disconnected from the way she feels about him in the novel’s latter half. It’s normal to have complicated feelings about the end of a marriage, of course, but there’s no emotional throughline to help the reader understand why Cherry’s feelings change so dramatically.

Rowell delivers the requisite happily-ever-after, but it doesn’t quite satisfy.

Pub Date: April 14, 2026

ISBN: 9780063380264

Page Count: 416

Publisher: Morrow/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: Dec. 20, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2026

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