Book Review: Summer at Lake Haven

Goodreads Summary:

Samantha Fremont may still be grappling with her mother’s death, but this summer she’s determined to build a new life for herself. Starting with making her friend’s dream wedding dress and establishing herself as a boutique fashion designer in the process. What she does not need is a surprise litter of puppies, the voice in the back of her mind saying she can’t do any of this—or her friend’s gorgeous brother who’s visiting from England for the wedding.

Ian Somerhill knows a sabbatical in Haven Point is exactly what his children need to recover from their own mother’s death. And even if he and Sam got off on the wrong foot, she has a way with Miranda and Thomas. As Sam—and her adorable puppies—bond with his children, they fall into a friendship unlike any he’s had in a long time. But Ian has obligations in England her can’t ignore—and a complicated past that might just stop this summer romance from ever blooming into something more.

My Thoughts:

Remember when you were a kid, and summer seemed to last forever and was all about playing outside, reading all night, fireflies and popsicles? That is what this book made me feel while I was reading it – like I was on an endless summer vacation. It was so light and easy and happy – plus, it had puppies and a rumply, British professor love interest…

Samantha is a romantic – how could you not be, if you are a wedding dress designer? She and her late mother used to run a boutique together – now that her mother is gone, the boutique is Samantha’s, which she runs while designing custom wedding dresses as well. Samantha is learning to live life out from under the shadow of her sharp tongued mother, who seemed to always have a derisive or mocking thing to say, even to her devoted daughter. Starry-eyed Sam, she would call her, making fun (and not in a lighthearted teasing way) of Samantha’s quick propensity to fall in love. So now that Sam is on her own for the first time ever, she is trying to override that little voice inside that wants to hold her back, that niggling of self-doubt.

When Ian and his family move in next door for the summer, Samantha vows she will not fall head over heels for this handsome, fish obsessed professor. She has learned her lesson. Ian has a past – and future – of his own that overshadows any hope of a relationship, the least of which is the geographical distance.

I enjoyed this easy little summer read very much – I love RaeAnne Thayne and Haven Point, so this was a sweet return to favorite characters. They just make me smile! And this book was no different. I loved seeing the evolution of Samantha and Ian, and also their own personal growth overcoming the history that is weighing them down.

All in all, a must read for your summer reading, whether you are on a beach or just at home!

Thank you to NetGalley for the chance to read this book in exchange for an honest review.

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9 thoughts on “Book Review: Summer at Lake Haven

  1. But why does every book lately have to have a spouse diiiiiiiiiiie?! Argh! Despite this annoyance to me, (lol), I now want to read this book. And hopefully it won’t send me down that rabbit hole of wondering which one of us in our marriage is going to die first and have to have a complicated romance that fits a book or movie 🙂

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    1. 😂😂😂 it really is a big theme. I guess that way it’s easier to explain and have kids in the storyline? I can go down those rabbit holes too. There was a book I put down recently because there was a deceased mom named Erin with a little boy. I was like nope nope.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Oh yeah. I’m on this episode of Virgin River where the family is posioned or something (didn’t get to finish it yet) and I was like “oh heck, no…fast forwarding…” because that is a huge fear of mine for my kids! Some things are just a trigger. That whole “somebody’s going to die” theme is why I stopped reading Karen Kingsbury. She’s a really good writer but yikes…. I mean, listen, I get it … I killed off one of my character’s grandfather but he was OLD, okay? he wasn’t a young husband 😉

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  2. Pingback: My Sunday-Monday Post – Still Life, With Cracker Crumbs..

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