Roomies by Christina Lauren

Roomies

by Christina Lauren

'Christina Lauren have fast become my go-to for sexy, honest contemporary erotic romance.' Heroes and Heartbreakers

From subway . . .

Monday night. Wednesday morning. Friday lunchtime. Holland Bakker plans her journeys to work around the times the handsome Irish musician, Calvin McLoughlin, plays his guitar in the 50th Street subway station. Lacking the nerve to actually talk to the gorgeous stranger, Holland is destined to admire him from a distance. Then a near-tragedy causes her busker to come to her rescue, only to disappear when the police start asking questions.

To Broadway . . .

Keen to repay Calvin, Holland gets him an audition with her uncle, Broadway's hottest musical director. When he aces the tryout, Calvin's luck seems to have turned - until his reason for disappearing earlier becomes clear: he doesn't have a visa.

Impulsively, Holland offers to wed the Irishman to keep him in New York, still keeping her infatuation secret. Calvin becomes the darling of Broadway, while their relationship evolves from awkward roommates to besotted lovers. Yet surrounded by theatre and actors, what will it take for Holland and Calvin to realise that they both stopped pretending a long time ago?

To happy ever after?

Reviewed by llamareads on

3 of 5 stars

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I enjoyed reading this book and found Holland extremely likable and Calvin adorably hot, but my goodness did this book have issues. Holland has some serious spoiled rich girl issues. She lives in NYC, with her rent 2/3s paid by her rich uncles, who've also created a job for her. She's got a great education, but seems to be just sitting around waiting for something great to happen to her. Enter Calvin, subway busker and dude who has overstayed his student visa apparently also waiting for something great to happen to him. Of course, things conspire to make Holland take an insane leap and marry Calvin in order to make him legal...

On the plus side, the book is frankly hilarious. I loved the fake text conversations and the vibrator in the couch scene had me giggling like a loon. I liked the author's writing style, and despite rolling my eyes constantly at how oblivious Holland is, I liked her, though her inability to actually get her life in gear reminded me of all the things I don't like in the new adult genre. I also loved the NYC off-Broadway setting.

The big issue for me was that the handling of the immigration issues felt completely tone deaf. Holland's uncles are rich and well connected, so they basically bulldoze through the process with money. I guess it helped that Calvin was white. I have many friends who've immigrated here legally and the depiction here is... well, pretty much completely false. Yeah, it's fiction, but it kept jarring me out of the book, nonetheless.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 1 November, 2018: Finished reading
  • 1 November, 2018: Reviewed