Emily moves to Bloombay island to take a job helping to run a hotel for an elderly widow, Abigail, who can no longer manage in her own after her husband’s death. Emily is putting her life back together after the end of her 20+ year marriage. She finds things in disarray at the hotel, and they won’t be able to host any guests until some important repairs are made. Abigail is an excellent cook, so they decide to run a small restaurant at the hotel to generate some income until the repairs are made.
Emily is accepted warmly into the tight knit community in Bloombay and starts to make new friends, in particular Matthew, a handsome and kind divorcee about her age. Emily’s younger sisters come to visit and also fall under the spell that Bloombay seems to emanate.
And that’s basically all that happens in this novel. It is cut off practically in the middle of a conversation, with the prompt to buy the next book. I dislike this sort of series marketing, where the first book is offered at a very low price, presumably with the hope that you’ll enjoy it so much that you’ll buy the next one at a higher price. But I won’t be doing that since the writing is amateurish, with awkward sentence structure and grammatical errors. The male/female relationships are shallow, and none of them properly developed, as there seems to be no physical intimacy between any of them, except for perhaps a chaste kiss now and then…