It's taken me a few days to try and compose a review that will sum up what I thought about this book but I STILL don't think I'll be able to do it justice.
I LOVED The Good Life, and I was really looking forward to reading this book. Sometimes when you loved the first book in a series, there's a worry that the sequel (or in this case, the prequel) won't be as good. Well fear not readers! This one, in my opinion was even better.
WARNING! THERE MAY BE SPOILERS IN THIS REVIEW IF YOU HAVEN'T READ THE GOOD LIFE
I forgot, until I started reading this, how much I loved Jake Odom. My heart broke for him as I read the prologue, where we see him as a little boy neglected by his parents but welcomed as one of their own by the Humsuckers (Roxie's parents). The story flits back and forth from the present to the past, and told in both points of view. I loved seeing how Jakes feelings towards Roxie started to change, how he went from feeling brotherly to something more.
We know from reading The Good Life that Roxie and Jake have history, they had a summer fling that will forever be known as 'The Summer of Roxie and Jake' and this is the story of that summer.
Roxie is home for the summer, licking her wounds after being duped by her not so perfect boyfriend. Not wanting anyone to discover her humiliation she hides away in her room, but Jake isn't going to let her wallow. He helps her get a job in the bar he manages and this is the start of their summer.
Jake tells Roxie she needs to have fun, let her hair down and have a summer fling before returning to college for her last year. She agrees and ends up on a date that is so hilariously bad that I could not stop laughing! Finally Roxie admits to herself that Jake is the perfect candidate and wastes no time in putting a plan into place.
Jake takes no persuading, and when they get together their chemistry is off the scale. They're perfect for each other, and it makes you wonder why they took so long to hook up.
As summer draws to an end, I knew what was coming, and yet despite that I couldn't help but hope that they would see the light.
I love Jodie Beau's writing style, she makes it so effortless to get engrossed in the story and I feel as though I am there with the characters. I felt as though I was Roxie's friend, that we'd met up for coffee and she was recounting what has happened to her since I saw her last. I laugh at the scrapes she gets herself into, cringe at her embarrassments, swoon over her perfect boyfriend, and cry at the sad moments. And boy did I cry at the end of this story! The epilogue slayed me. Even though I knew what decision Roxie made I was still desperate for her to see sense, and change her mind. The end of this story was so emotional, so poignant, and so heart breaking that I'm still thinking about it days later.