Jennifer Ryan truly wrote one highly emotional and trigger-filled romance novel with The One You Want. Trigger warning: If child abuse, abandonment, domestic violence, physical, verbal and emotional abuse, alcoholism, lying, and cheating are issues for you, this novel may be a poor choice for you. Although I have issues with some of the aforementioned, I found myself enjoying the strength and family/friend relationships in this novel, and am giving it 4 stars for the way these issues were handled.
To escape her father's abuse, 3 years after his death, Rose returns home to her mother and sister after leaving for college 8 years earlier and not even returning for her father's funeral, to be maid of honor at her lifelong best friend, Maggie's wedding to Marc. Rose's mother is still suffering from all the abuse she took from her late husband, and her younger sister is wearing her feelings of hurt and anger about what she considers Rose's abandonment of her 8 years earlier, with her dyed black hair, black clothing and hostile attitude. With a good therapist and a lot of work, Rose seems to have overcome her past abuse, but is she strong enough to help her mother and sister begin to live for themselves again? No spoilers here.
When Rose finally meets Maggie's fiance, Marc, she's in shock. It seems she had a drunken one-night stand with him months before he ever met her best friend, Maggie, but at the same time she meets his best man, Gray, and the two are immediately attracted to one another. It was a tad too insta-love for this reader's taste, but I was intrigued to learn how her previous knowledge of Marc would play out, especially since, at first, he appears not to remember her--but, as we soon learn, it's just a false front, and Rose is torn between wanting to admit to Maggie that she and Marc knew each other, that she was turned off when she saw a text from his other girlfriend early the next morning after their night together, and furious when she realized he'd made her "the other woman", and yet not wanting to hurt her relationship with her best friend or damage her upcoming marriage by admitting that fact to Maggie. None of this situation is helped by the fact that Marc is trying to manipulate the situation, lie to Maggie, make sure that Rose keeps his one-night stand with Rose private, while also, for reasons of his own, also attempting to sabotage Rose and Gray's budding relationship, but will Marc succeed?
While I enjoyed and sympathized with Rose's attempts to help her mother and sister recover from their years of abuse, again, their recovery seemed a little too fast-paced to this reader. One doesn't recover from that kind of trauma quickly or easily. Additionally, I wish the author had spent more time and added more depth to Rose's insta-love relationship with Gray, a truly likeable character, but even at the end of the novel, I still felt that their relationship seemed too pat, too easy, too quick, and that neither character had really had the opportunity to truly know and learn about each another.
This was a deeply emotional novel, and despite all the triggers, The One You Want was a good, solid read by Ms. Ryan, however, I think that expanding the time frame in which the novel took place might have made for a better, more cohesive and more believable romance, both for Maggie and Rose.
I voluntarily read an advance reader copy of this novel. The opinions expressed are my own.