Tuesday 10 September 2019

All the Way to Heaven by Becky Doughty

This is another of the books that I read in a day whilst camping.

All the Way to Heaven is a standalone book and the first in the Fallout Series. It features Ani, a business student, who finds out that her boyfriend (and professor) is already married with kids.  She travels to Italy to take her mind off him, however a bike accident forces her to stay in one place and she finds herself torn between two beaus.

The blurb says:
Anica Tomlin, business major, has just learned that the man she's been planning her future around, her Global Finance professor, already has a beautiful wife and family. Ani cashes in her graduation gift to herself a little early 'a trip to Tuscany' but from the moment she boards the wrong train in Pisa, her plans for solitude and self-indulgence begin to unravel around her. When a bicycle accident thrusts Ani into the skilled hands of the dashing Dr. Cosimo Lazzaro, she reluctantly accepts his invitation to recover in his family's country villa, perched on a hilltop surrounded by the Lazzaro olive groves. But it's been a black year for olive growers all over Italy, and generations of tradition are being put to the test like never before. Ani is swept up in the drama of life in Tuscany, the convergence of old and new, and the passions that drive people to pursue the desires of their hearts. Just as Ani begins to get her feet under her again, an unexpected turn of events leaves her doubting the very existence of happily-ever-after, unless she can learn to trust the desires of her own heart. Although All the Way to Heaven is a stand-alone novel, it is the first book in The Fallout Series, a collection of sweet contemporary romances that follow characters featured in the first book.
I did enjoy this book.  It's a sweet romance, so is suitable for all ages. The book was well written and had a steady pace to the plot.  It's not action-packed and fast, but very descriptive and makes you feel like you're in the Italian countryside, living a relaxing life as part of the Italian community.  The love story is predictable, but I enjoyed it nonetheless.  A good holiday read.


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