Reviewed by shannonmiz on
2.5*
Historical fiction is so fun, is it not? And the Chicago Fire... well, that's intense! This particular book was... less so. Not a bad read, but I suppose a tad underwhelming? It's basically a story of friendships and romantic relationships colliding in a big ol' love triangle that happens to get extra dramatic. One of the girls (Emmeline) is a newly-minted high society girl who's set to marry some rich dude that she doesn't care about. Fiona, her bestie-turned-maid, is in love with their childhood friend (and ex-beau of Emmeline) Anders. Emmeline.... is hard to stomach. She's pretty selfish, and so indecisive. Which look, I understand, I am hugely indecisive too, but when you combine it with selfishness, it gets pretty hard to feel sympathetic toward her.
Fiona, on the other hand is incredibly sympathetic. Easy to root for. Unfortunately, there were too many rich people shenanigans to wade through, and those I sort of didn't care about. Now. I liked watching how the girls' friendship was impacted by all of their choices. That was probably my favorite part of the story. But when it got closer to the end, it felt really predictable.
The book, at one point, straight up tells you how it's going to end. Which, is a little bit of an odd choice, because it takes away some of the intensity. Plus a few of the other twists are just easy to see coming from a mile away. Still, the emotional aspect was there for me. Probably because I cared about Fiona, and kind of about Anders too, probably just because Fiona did, but still.
Bottom Line: Liked Fiona, liked the focus on friendship, but could have done with a bit more excitement and less predictability.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 13 September, 2018: Finished reading
- 13 September, 2018: Reviewed