Johana Gavez has delivered the absolute quintessence of a perfect holiday romance a story so warm, so full of heart, and so beautifully relatable that it feels like coming home. This book isn't just a Christmas read; it's a heartfelt exploration of friendship, family, and the terrifying, wonderful leap into love, all wrapped in the cozy, glittering magic of the season.
From the very first page, Morgan and Angie felt real to me. Gavez has a gift for crafting characters who live and breathe. Morgan’s conflict the tug-of-war between a thriving career and the gentle, guilt-inducing pull of home is achingly familiar. Her avoidance of Apfelville isn't out of a lack of love, but from an overwhelming sense of not measuring up in a family whose roots run deep. And Angie! Her courage in leaving Colombia to chase her filmmaking dream, coupled with the poignant sacrifice of spending holidays an ocean away from her own family, made my heart both ache and swell with admiration for her. Their dynamic is the bedrock of this story: a friendship so genuine, so supportive, and so filled with easy laughter and deep understanding that you feel you’re eavesdropping on real best friends.
The genius of the setup is its delicious tension. The "friends and family think they're already together" trope is executed flawlessly here. It’s not just meddling; it’s a chorus of people who see the obvious, radiant truth that Morgan and Angie are too afraid to voice. Every nudge from a sister, every knowing look from a parent, every strategically hung mistletoe crackled with anticipation. Gavez masterfully uses this external pressure to turn their internal worlds inside out, forcing them to examine feelings they’ve meticulously compartmentalized.
The romantic tension is a slow, sweet burn the very best kind. It’s in the shared glances that last a beat too long, the casual touches that suddenly feel electric, and the safe familiarity that begins to feel dangerously like something more. You feel every ounce of Morgan’s and Angie’s fear: the terror of ruining the most important relationship in their lives. The author makes us feel the weight of that risk, which makes the eventual payoff all the more satisfying and earned.
Apfelville itself is a character a postcard-perfect holiday town that provides the most enchanting backdrop. It’s a place of twinkling lights, festive cheer, and a community that wraps you in a hug. The contrast between New York's solitary ambition and Apfelville's communal warmth perfectly mirrors the central emotional journey: from isolation to connection.
But what truly impressed me was how Gavez balanced the festive fluff with genuine emotional depth. This story tackles guilt, the immigrant experience, the definition of success, and the anxiety of change with a tender, respectful hand. It’s a romance that acknowledges life’s complexities, making the holiday magic feel not like a fantasy, but like a catalyst for honest, human courage.
"This Is the Season to Make You Mine" is a triumph of the genre. It’s the book you read with a cup of cocoa, a contented sigh, and a full heart. It delivers on every promise of festive cheer and friends-to-lovers bliss while offering substance and soul. To the author: you have crafted a modern holiday classic. This story is a sparkling ornament on the tree of romance literature beautiful, heartfelt, and destined to be revisited for many seasons to come. I adored every single page.