On a hot summer’s day in 1975, young heiresses Willow and Ivy Wilde vanish while playing by a pond on the Stonehold estate, never to be seen again.
Now, fifty years later, Stonehold is again abuzz, this time in preparation for the homecoming of Summer Wilde and Brody Weston, whose upcoming wedding is all anyone in Echo, Washington can talk about.
Nobody knows that Summer doesn’t want to marry Brody. That she doesn’t want to inherit Stonehold and be tethered to the unshakable darkness that clings to the halls and grounds like cobwebs. Nobody knows because Summer doesn’t have a choice—she has to marry Brody, and she’s long made peace with her fate.
That is, until she sees Ford Flores—third-generation groundskeeper at Stonehold—for the first time in fifteen years. Ford is everything Brody isn’t; she’s self-sufficient, quick-witted, effortlessly kind, covered in tattoos, and a woman. And the last time Summer saw her, she’d kissed her—impulsive and electrifying—then she’d ran away like a coward.
Summer Wilde is done being a coward.
But it’s hard to take charge of your future in a place like Echo, where the past looms thick as the mountain mist tumbling down the white-tipped Cascades. From ghostly apparitions to secret rooms with mysterious paintings and an old sketchbook with a mind-blowing revelation scribbled inside, Summer begins to realize that if she wants to move forward, she’ll have to put Stonehold’s past to rest—starting with the unsolved disappearance of Willow and Ivy.
With her wedding only days away, the clock is ticking. Even with Ford’s help it won’t be easy—no one is telling the truth and everyone has something to hide. Even Summer.
Ally North (she/her) has been writing fiction her entire life, but recently, during the pandemic, she began writing sapphic romance out of pure chaotic boredom and discovered an untried knack for the genre. She lives in America, but occasionally she lives in England. When she isn’t writing, Ally can be found cooking with obscene amounts of garlic, traveling someplace new, rescuing animals and feeding Jean-Claude, the wild possum who lives under her shed.
Before going inti more details, i would have given this book 3 stars having or not having read the Bloom Town duology.
I had great expectations about this book. BT Is the book i compare all the other sapphic romance to (it and Those Who Wait from Haley Cass tbh) and i must say that the wild and the weeds is very far from it.
I knew that both the series were initially born as fanfictions of the same TV show but in my opinion it is too evident when you read this book, even though i watched just a few episodes of the TV show. the manor where the story takes place, the twins, the lake, the gardner, the girl that finds out she's gay before marriage, i think it is really too similar to be read forgetting the original work. Even in BT you could tell which carachter was who, but at least the setting and the story were completely different.
The book is well written, i can't complain about this, and in some parts there are pieces of what i like about the author, for example the dialogues about the main couple, the way they talk to each other and answer back and forth often in a smartass way. But the building of their relationship? Nowhere to be seen in my opinion. 15 years apart, we see their past just by stories of memories, little to no interaction in the present and after an exchangin of few words they are madly in love for each other. While i was reading BT i could *feel* Abby and Joey attraction developing, to the point i wanted them to kiss more than they wanted it themselves.
Particolar mention to the sex scenes: they still are good, i could say above average compared to what you can find around, but i really couldn't see the chemistry between Summer and Flores and this, at least for me, makes a lot of difference in what i read. They feel a Little unecessary somehow, like you could have them cut off or fade to black and the book would have not lost much in its narration. In BT i remember almost sweating while reading them, here even though they are in some parts similar (sometimes i had the impression the same sentences were used) i don't find them memorable.
So in the end i think this book could have been much more. Will i still buy the new Ally North book? Yes, because i think she writes well and BT showed me what she is capable of, i hope that the next one will be a total original story.
I deeply loved Bloom Town—the plot, the action, the resilience of the characters, and the writing style of Ally North.
While reading The Wilds and The Weeds, I realized that authors cannot always give us masterpieces.
When I started reading the novel, I had a bit of difficulty because my mind kept going to The Haunting of Bly Manor, and the weirdest thing is that I would scare myself thinking about what was going to happen, when in the end it wouldn’t be “as scary and suspenseful” as the original story.
I didn’t know this was a sort of fanfic, so I was a bit shaken at first.
I did appreciate the way Ally North describes the settings; all the details made Echo, the Hearth, and Stonehold more vivid in my mind.
The main characters’ storyline required me to suspend my disbelief (no spoilers) regarding how they come together. I liked their back and forth, and the intimate scenes are actually scorching hot.
Some parts are also touching and sad, and others quite interesting regarding the paranormal/theories, etc.
What I didn’t understand—and didn’t like—is how the tasteless lockdown trend of “I feel like Anne Frank” made its way into the pages of this book.
Comparing an heiress possibly renting an attic and therefore being alone/lonely to what Anne Frank must have felt while “hiding and fearing for her life” is not good. It just isn’t. No matter what reasons you think you might have for Ellis, a lawyer who also worked for the Innocence Project, to say those words, it seemed out of character.
In the end, I managed to enjoy the book, but not love it as much as I loved Bloom Town.
I will, of course, look forward to whatever Ally North writes in the future, and I will read it for sure.
I really really wanted to like this book more. As a huge fan of Bloomtown, I found myself struggling to get through this one.
I’m all for evocative imagery and lush detail, but each scene dragged with descriptions from the protagonists pov in a painstaking way. I truly think that in the first 20% of the book we accomplished very little.
Despite being a relatively longer page count, it really felt like not much happened throughout the book. We probably could’ve accomplished what we were going for in 60% of the length. There were so many redundant monologues from Summer about the same exact thing.
Ultimately, the antagonists this time also felt cartoonishly evil. There just wasn’t the nuance that i was expecting, and i felt myself being exasperated during certain scenes. Like i guess people like that exist for sure, but really??? The mystery also felt pretty obvious although it’s painted in a way that it’s not supposed to be.
Finally, I thought the relationship between our two lovers was just not super compelling :(( I think we could have benefited from some scenes showing rather than telling of times when they were younger. It kinda goes from 0-100 pretty fast.
Overall despite my criticisms, I think that some of the side characters were alright. I have definitely read worse, and might be a bit harder on this due to high expectations.
It’s probably closer to a 2.5 than a 3 for me sadly.
I didn't like Bloomtown but I thought I'd give this one a try, in part because the blurb sounded up my alley and in part because negative reviews are fun to write.
Meet Summer. She has an MBA from Harvard (which she apparently received with really good grades) and doesn't know a single thing about how businesses work. There is, in fact, a large part of the plot which relies on her not thinking about how businesses work for like 22 years until her corporate lawyer friend is like "you have an MBA from Harvard. Does this make any sense to you?" and Summer remembers how businesses work.
Summer's parents (they were uber rich, but like the nice kind because they planted trees and made garden gnomes I guess) died when she was eight. This left her to be raised by her the Westons. Mr. Weston was her father's business partner and he's the mean kind of uber rich because he doesn't like planting trees or making garden gnomes. For some reason Summer feels bad about owing them for raising her but also is cool with accepting nice things from them. Like tuition for her Harvard MBA (girl, just take out student loans and pay them off when you get a job! It's not like Harvard MBAs don't pay well!) and a Range Rover. Did I mention that Summer's dream is to start an environmental nonprofit?
Then there's Ford. Ford is... fine I guess? Her greatest failing is that she is, for some reason, obsessed with Summer. Girl, you can do better!
Brody is Summer's fiance.
Summer also has a friend who is a lawyer. She’s the partner at a law firm and also Manhattan’s youngest DA and also volunteers for the innocence project. Also she has the time and flexibility to just fly off to Oregon to be her friend’s therapist all weekend.
The name dropping was egregious here. Apparently the little dress shop owner knew everyone in the fashion industry before they were famous. I thought this was a fun characterization bit and we were meant to see that he was an old man puffing himself up through fabrications. Nope. Because it turned out the restaurant owner’s family knew Louis Armstrong before he was famous! And Ellis knew Justice Jackson before she was on the Supreme Court! In fact
Anyway, the mystery wasn’t mysterious. Summer did exactly nothing to change her situation. If I weren’t doing this as a buddy read/roast, I would have tossed this book aside a while ago.
Just absolutely excellent. I cried?? Ally North is quickly making her way up my favorite authors list. This AND the Bloom Town books? She swings and she doesn’t miss!
I really wasn’t sure how to rate this book; For me, it’s a 4 in enjoyment but unfortunately a 3 when it comes to quality.
Ally North is such a talented writer that I can’t work out whether this book is disappointing for Ally but amazing in comparison to most Sapphic fiction, or if it doesn’t hold its own against other similar books.
The short answer here is if you like Ally’s writing style, you’ll probably enjoy this book regardless.
Ally is a gorgeous writer and her story-setting, world building and character development was just as good as Bloomtown. The complicated relationships and family dynamics were very well written, and I thought the chemistry between the two main characters was also excellent.
However…. For me, the plot felt clumsy and the nuance just wasn’t there.
The first half of the book had me hooked, however the second half felt rushed and confused. The plot can’t seem to decide whether it’s a mystery, horror or romance, and unfortunately struggles to commit to any of them. The mystery element felt predictable, undefined and like an afterthought.
At times, the relationship plot points felt rushed and completely unrealistic. And on top of it all, there were a LOT of typos here.
Essentially, I did really enjoy this book and would read it again - However, it’s not a polished final product and feels quite messy in some parts. That being said, Ally’s beautiful writing style shines through and, for me, makes all the questionable aspects of this book worth it.
I actually hate to drop my rating but I feel really strongly about this book and not in a good way. I feel like this was a Bly Manor fanfic where are the characters were just recycled versions from the show.
Dani/Poppins = Summer/Sunshine Jamie = Ford Flora and Miles = The twins
Idk I could probably go on but what's the point. Sadly everything felt like an "Echo" of the show.
At least reading Bloom Town the concepts were distanced enough to not be a distracting reminder of Bly but this book was almost ridiculously copycat-ish.
The groundskeeper, Ford, talks exactly like Jamie. The setting is a mansion. It's haunted by these "memories". Grotesque murders occurred. People died in a lake on the property.
Overall I just felt disappointed that this book felt unoriginal and it really made it difficult to enjoy.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
The first half moved pretty slow and then moved too fast at the end. It felt like there was too much happening within the plot that could’ve been removed. I really wanted to like it but I couldn’t :(
This was even more of an obvious Bly Manor fic than even Bloom Town was. It was also a little draggy and more than a little silly--a character even says to Summer at one point "You have an MBA, how do you not know this?" Which is a VERY good question--but not, like, terrible. The resolution of the overarching plot gets sloppy at the end and there are SO MANY COMMA SPLICES (her editor, if she has one, needs a new job). Spoiler cut for more on the ending:
Anyway, I didn't hate this but I also didn't like it that much. It doesn't have that Bloom Town magic, but it's a serviceable self-published romance.
4.5 rounded up! Truly a great book. I enjoyed the depth of characters, the imagery, and the overall coziness. I did feel the second part of the book was rushed… it almost felt like another book. I wish there was a bit more relationship building between summer and Ford. Also, the paranormal factor seemed kind of out of place, wish there was more there.
I must admit that this book threw me off at first since so different from Bloom Town, ghosts/memories playing an important role and Summer Wilde is thirty years old and has yet to grow a spine and choose her own happiness, break up with her fiancé Brody Weston she doesn’t love and not live her entire life pressured by obligations to the Westons for taking her in after her parents death.
I am a patient and open-minded person though and the more I got into the story the more I liked it, the things that were a bit hard swallow at first were in the in the end what I will remember extra much, it all just made sense. This is a book that is focussing on a mystery Summer must solve, the disappearance of the Wilde girls in 1975 and what was the whole deal with her parents’ accident 22 years prior. The romance part with Ford is more a side story even if also so important for Summer’s growth, freeing herself from the Westons and finally admitting the truth about her sexuality, so of course a huge enhancement to the story.
So as a summary, the book is not the type of addictive book that Bloom Town was but still worth a read and thoroughly enjoyable if you give the story a chance.
Like BT, this is based on the same TV series. I really didn’t mind this, but this book is just too similar to the source material. My guess is this was written before BT.
The relationship building was not as strong here for the MCs. Ford has strong feelings for Summer almost straight from the beginning, despite limited interaction when they were younger. If you reference a 15 year longing, there really has to be something to back it up. There needed to be more build up when they reconnected or more of a friendship when they were to younger to warrant Ford’s feelings.
All that aside, Ally still writes an interesting story and I enjoyed her take on the mystery twins. Still looking forward to what Ally will put out next as I think she’s grown as an author from when this was written.
ALLY MOTHER FUCKIN NORTH, damn she knows how to write a sapphic novel. This was such a fun read, I am in love with Ford. There were too many characters in the beginning for my little pea brain to follow, and I still feel weird about the relationship between Brody and Summer. BUT my favorite thing about Ally North’s writing is the poetic writing trickled in. You’ll be reading about something silly and then BAM you’re hit with the most introspective and deep sentence you’ve ever read.
since I know you’re all wondering, I did not enjoy this as much as Bloomtown - but mostly because I think Bloomtown is an utter masterpiece and I cannot compare them fairly. The main characters are well-defined and the emotion/guilt/PTSD is once again written so well. Ally North’s writing is an utter joy, and while I didn’t enjoy Wilds&Weeds as much as Bloomtown (I don’t love contemporary romance, but I am fiercely loyal to Ally North) I would recommend it to anyone who dabbles in sapphic contemporary romance.
SOOOO GOOD. holy hell. i was a little slow to get into it but once i got hooked i was sold. the foreshadowing and writing by the author is amazing. i'm obsessed with summer and ford's story. i'm surprised this book isn't on more "must read" wlw lists because it's easily one of the best i've read. there aren't many spicy scenes (slowburn af) BUT the few there are... are worth the wait + very long lol
3.5 stars tbh. I bumped it to 4 because she made a blooming together reference towards the end that had me WAILING over Bloomtown all over again 😂 was it intentional? Who knows, but I'm delusional enough to enjoy it nonetheless.
Honestly, I enjoyed myself, but I found myself wishing this was set in a different era. I think the plot would have hit way harder with like a Gothic horror romance vibe, but I digress. 'Twas a good time either way!
Coming off Bloom Town, quite possibly my favourite read of this past year, my expectations for this novel were understandably high. The Wild and the Weeds is an ambitious story that blends a mystery, a touch of paranormal, and romance, but for me it never quite settled into one clear identity.
Each element is intriguing on its own, yet none is developed deeply enough to fully land. The romantic story, in particular, felt more implied than earned; I wanted more emotional groundwork and a clearer sense of the characters’ history and attraction. The pacing also wavered at times, with sections that dragged followed by a sudden, less believable resolution.
That said, the ending works emotionally, and it reminded me why I admire Ally North’s writing—when she leans into character and relationship, her strengths really shine. Readers who enjoy genre-blending stories may connect with this one more than I did, and I remain very much a fan of her work overall and remain excited to see what she does next.
I wanted to like this book so much but it was oversold and she under delivered. I enjoyed the story telling but the ending was thrown together sloppily , the “murder mystery” portion of the book was lack luster , many major issues were moseyed over, the romance was … okay and the main character Summer was so stale and two dimensional to me. I actually felt as if all characters lacked depth and their personalities didn’t permeate through the page. I thought about Bloom town for weeks after I read it . I’ll forget about this book after I finish this review .
I usually don't mind editing issues, but this book had quite a lot. Also small details did not add up. Contradicting that the mc does not cry or like surprises. Small inconsistencies that just became a bit irritating. Overall I enjoyed the story, but think the book needed to be polished a bit more.
once again, an absolutely magnificent piece of work by ally north! she genuinely cannot write a bad book 😭
she truly has such a special talent of making you feel everythinggg with her words and captivates her audience with every chapter. i had such a wonderful time getting to know and fall in love with Summer and Ford and am sad to move on from this story🥹 such a beautiful and healing story that’ll stay with me forever
thank you ally north for truly capturing the sacred, beautiful and inspiring love in sapphic relationships 🥹
I thoroughly enjoyed this book especially once the pace picked up, which unfortunately took a little while but eventually got there. It was a little slow at first, requiring me to really focus and stick with it. I will say I definitely enjoy this author’s writing style, her descriptions, the dialogue, it really makes you feel the environment, feel the characters. I will say, I didn’t love this book as much as Bloom town though but I tried not to hold that against this book…it’s its own story in my opinion (although I’ve seen people say this started as a fanfic of Bly manor..??? I’ve never seen nor heard of this so to me this is a regular story by an author I enjoy) The spice was spicy for sure so no worries there..lol. If Ally puts out another book, I’ll definitely be reading it. As for this one, probably bookshelf trophy worthy just haven’t purchased it yet.
While this book didn’t top the Bloom Town duology, Ally Norths’s second release did not disappoint. I was excited to see how she wrote in a modern day setting and she honestly blew it away. Her writing is so descriptive and though it did fully immerse me at times, there were points I feel she would go on a tangent that I felt didn’t really add anything to the story. Other than those few paragraphs, the rest of the story had me hooked. The tension between the characters and how she was going to get them together in the short timeline, as well as the mystery surrounding Stonehold he me in the edge of my seat. There were parts I felt like yelling at the characters to dig deeper into the mystery. It did feel a bit predictable but the justice Summer gets for her family is satisfying. I had a good time reading this book and can’t wait for more from Ally North!