![]() ![]() They’re so cute and genuine you can’t help rooting for them, even when they’re acting stupid. Like in Catch and Cradle, the writing is snappy and the characters lovely. Marina, on the other hand, feels not giving these new feelings a chance to bloom would be worse than risking said friendship. Iz, who has been hurt before and is convinced they suck at love, is determined not to act on their feelings and wants to prove to Marina that they can be trusted not to mess up their beautiful friendship. They haven’t mentioned the kiss since it happened and the resolutions they’ve taken in their time apart are radically different. A month and a half later, Marina flies to Halifax to celebrate Iz’s twenty-first birthday. Lately, they’ve both felt their relationship change, culminating in a sloppy drunken peck on the lips on New Year’s Eve. ![]() Iz and Marina have been best friends since they were toddlers. ![]() It’s set a few months after the first book but both stories can be read as standalone, though I recommend reading Catch and Cradle first. ![]() I was writing my review of Catch and Cradle and browsing the author’s website where I found about this novella, starring Iz, Hope’s nonbinary housemate, and I just had to stop everything and read it. ![]()
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