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20 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Better than Calgon, September 14, 2009
I know I can count on Katie Fforde to help me escape and leave me with a wistful smile on my face. When my neice was a flight attendant, she discovered Katie Fforde on a London layover. We both became hooked and have now read everything Ms. Fforde has written. We like the fact that she writes for Brits and not a US audience. We sometimes have to do a little research to find out what she is talking about. For instance, we had no idea what an Aga was. When I read Love Letters I was delighted to see characters from one of her earlier novels. Just like the main character, I found Katie's brooding, intimidating, vulnerable, and devastatingly handsome Irish poet irrestible. The lead character in Love Letters is young, but Ms. Fforde just as often gives us characters who (like myself) have been around for a while. Ms. Fforde's books follow a recipe: 1. Woman faces undesired change. 2. Woman faces change with creativity taking her outside her comfort zone. 3. Woman makes new friends who help her in her transition. 3. Woman meets a man she can't stand and falls hopelessly in love with him. 4. Woman's new skills are put to the test. 5. Woman gets the man and the new life she has worked for. It is a very good recipe. Ms. Fforde is a master chef who manages to make her receipe seem new and fresh every time she serves it to her readers. I love learning about the places she takes us in her books: Irish villages, Scottish highlands, English country estates, live aboard barges on English canals, and English gardens. Ms. Fforde's characters battle pain, defeat and self-doubt with the help of good friends, food and wine. Does it get better than that?
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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Not as good as her other books, October 29, 2009
I usually love Katie Fforde books. Good escapism, good for a read in the tub. This one though, I was ready to strangle the main character. I hate movies and books that revolve around miscommunication - this one drove me nuts. The man that she loves calls her and texts her and what does she do? Deletes them. Doesn't read them. Give me a break.
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11 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
A former fan of Fforde finds the latest book just plain silly, January 14, 2010
I've read all of Katie Fforde's books, purchased most in hard cover. I am a fan of English books on relationships, and KF's books, while light reading, I've found enjoyable in the past. But they have started to deteriorate into silly romances without saying anything useful, interesting, or believable about relationships between people, not just men and women, but parents and children, friends, and more. The premise of this book is a 26-year-old virgin who hasn't found the right man but is suddenly willing to sleep with a womanizing novelist. I couldn't read further when she spends the night with him after an evening of drinking but can't figure out whether they actually had sex or not! This goes on for pages! And I'm not giving much away because this all happens early in the book. Nor is the rest of the plot either riveting or very believable. I usually give a one star to any book I can't get through, but as a fan of her earlier books I can't bear to.
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