I appreciated the honest thoughts Hadley had about her father and their relationship, but it seems unlikely that all of this would happen in a 24 hour period. There are admittedly a lot of family feels that most children of divorce (hi there!) can relate to (yep). This book shows Hadley heading overseas to her father’s wedding, to a woman she’s never met. I don’t expect every book to surprise me, but I want to at least be happy overall. Even smaller ones in contemporary novels become obvious and I get frustrated. I don’t know if I’m just a bitter reader these days, but my increasing ability to pick out plot twists ahead of time is starting to grate on me. This is something I actively want to read about and think about all the time. I thought this book could be a slam-dunk for me because of it, but I was left wanting more. I love the ideas of fate and destiny and coincidence and choices. A long night on the plane passes in a blink, but the two lose track in arrival chaos. Hadley Sullivan 17 misses her flight at JFK airport, is late to her father's second wedding in London with never-met stepmother. SmithĪlso by this author: This Is What Happy Looks Like, Happy Again, Summer Days & Summer Nights, Windfall, Field Notes on Loveįour minutes changes everything. The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight by Jennifer E.
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