From Goodreads
Aisling is thirty, flirty and frazzled.
But - just when she should finally be feeling all grown-up - she's floundering.
Because when you're recovering from a broken heart as well as struggling to keep your café as sizzling as your award-winning sausages, it's hard to feel you've really made it as an adult.Which is just the moment for the unexpected to strike and complicate everything.
Now is not the time for a delicious new man to show up, her best friend to demand the hen do of the century and a surprise celebrity appearance.
But Aisling, never one to worry about having too much on her plate, rolls up her sleeves: she's got this.
Until she discovers that being a proper grown-up means you can't do everything.
Sometimes you will let someone down.
But will it be those she loves, or herself?
My thoughts
This was a Library reading group read. The book is the third in a series that begins with Oh my God, What a Complete Aisling and is followed by The Importance of Being Aisling: Country Roads, Take her Home. I haven't read the first two in the series and I may have enjoyed this one more if I had.
Telling the story of Aisling a broken hearted young 30 something, struggling to cope with her recent break up and keeping her cafe running smoothly. The last thing she wants is for someone else to step into her life and try to steal her recently broken heart and attempt to mend it.
This is a light hearted romance that is supposed to make you laugh. Sadly, it didn't make me laugh and I struggled with it. It's a book that I did debate a DNF on, but I don't tend to do that I tend to soldier on. Was it worth soldiering on you may ask, in my opinion no. I am wondering what my reading group will make of it, whether they will feel the same about as I do or whether they loved it.
There have been readers out there that have enjoyed it, but sadly this reader was not one of them.
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