Love & Gelato by Jenna Evans Welch

Love & Gelato (Love & Gelato, #1)

by Jenna Evans Welch

“I made the wrong choice.”

Lina is spending the summer in Tuscany, but she isn’t in the mood for Italy’s famous sunshine and fairy-tale landscape. She’s only there because it was her mother’s dying wish that she get to know her father. But what kind of father isn’t around for sixteen years? All Lina wants to do is go back home.

But then she is given a journal that her mom had kept when she lived in Italy. Suddenly Lina’s uncovering a magical world of secret romances, art, and hidden bakeries. A world that inspires her, along with the ever-so-charming Ren, to follow in her mother’s footsteps and unearth a secret that has been kept for far too long. It’s a secret that will change everything she knew about her mother, her father—and even herself.

People come to Italy for love and gelato, someone tells her, but sometimes they discover much more.

Reviewed by Joséphine on

4 of 5 stars

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Initial thoughts: Set in Italy, where Lina learnt about her late mother's past, Love & Gelato had much to offer. Naturally, I enjoyed the setting. It was also pretty interesting to follow Lina's journey as she discovered more about her own father, whom she hadn't known her entire life. The romance was fairly slow burn, allowing time for the characters to get to know each other. It was quite a contrast to Lina's mother's year spent in Florence prior to Lina's birth. I liked that Lina was given the opportunity to explore that through her mother's journals.

On the audiobook front, I wasn't too thrilled by the mispronounced Italian words. The narrator could technically pronounce the words, including the rolling "r"s and also managed to convey the intonations convincingly. That's why it baffled me when"stracciatella" was pronounced as stra-kia-tella. That would've only been correct if the Italian spelling of the word had been "stracchiatella", which of course, it isn't. I'm not sure, though, which other words were mispronounced because I don't actually speak Italian. I did, however, spend three weeks in Rome, so I made sure to learn how to pronounce the food on an Italian menu.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 19 January, 2017: Finished reading
  • 19 January, 2017: Reviewed