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review 2020-12-08 13:22
Die sieben Dinge
Get A Life, Chloe Brown - Talia Hibbert

Nur knapp entgeht Chloe Brown einem Unfall, der böse hätte enden können. Die 31-Jährige steht unter Schock und realisiert, dass ihr Leben bis dato viel zu langweilig war. Ihre chronische Krankheit hat sie als Ausrede für ihre Zurückgezogenheit genutzt. Jetzt aber will sie alles umkrempeln, zieht aus ihrem Elternhaus aus und erstellt eine Liste von sieben Dingen, die ihr Leben erfüllter machen sollen. Das Problem: Sie braucht einen Lehrer. Ob Red Morgan, ihr neuer Nachbar, dabei helfen könnte?

 

„Kissing Chloe Brown“ ist der Auftakt der Romanreihe von Talia Hibbert zu den Brown-Schwestern.

 

Meine Meinung:
Der Roman besteht aus 23 angenehm kurzen Kapiteln. Sie werden von einem Pro- und einem Epilog eingerahmt. Erzählt wird aus der Sicht von Chloe und Red.

 

Der Schreibstil ist anschaulich und lebhaft, jedoch nicht zu platt. Eingestreut sind E-Mails, Aufzählungen und andere Elemente, die den Text auflockern.

 

Die Protagonistin ist eine der Stärken des Romans. Chloe ist alles andere als klischeehaft: chronisch krank, farbig, übergewichtig und ein wenig eigenwillig. Das macht sie sowohl sympathisch als auch authentisch und bringt Diversität in die Geschichte. Auch Red mochte ich gleich. Die Gefühle und Gedankengänge der beiden lassen sich gut nachvollziehen. Die übrigen Charaktere wirken ebenfalls interessant

 

Besonders angesprochen hat mich, dass es eine etwas andere Art von romantischer Komödie sein soll. Und in dieser Hinsicht wurde ich keineswegs enttäuscht. Zwar ist die Story, die sich auf fast 400 Seiten erstreckt, recht vorhersehbar. Aber sie ist auch humorvoll und gleichzeitig tiefgründiger als viele andere Bücher des Genres, denn es geht um ernste und wichtige Themen wie Chloes Krankheit und weitere Probleme. Dabei gleitet die Geschichte nicht ins Kitschige ab, sondern berührt auf wohltuende Weise.

 

Das Cover passt gut zum Genre, gefällt mir aber nicht ganz so gut wie das amerikanische Original. Ähnlich verhält es sich mit dem deutschen Titel, denn die englischsprachige Formulierung(„Get a Life, Chloe Brown“) ist treffender und klingt weniger schnulzig.

 

Mein Fazit:
Wer einen Liebesroman der etwas anderen Art sucht, wird bei „Kissing Chloe Brown“ von Talia Hibbert fündig. Er bietet intelligente Unterhaltung mit Herz und Humor. Eine empfehlenswerte Lektüre für schöne Lesestunden. Auf die folgenden Bände zu Chloes Schwestern bin ich schon jetzt gespannt.

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review 2020-04-20 22:51
Get a Life, Chloe Brown
Get A Life, Chloe Brown - Talia Hibbert
 
The Brown Sisters, Book 1

I Picked Up This Book Because: I liked the cover

The Characters:

Chloe Brown: I loved Chloe so much! She is so delightfully weird
Redford “Red” Morgan: The way this man loves, understands and needs Chloe is everything. I will be single until I meet my Red.
Dani Brown, Eve Brown, Gigi, Annie, Vik (I would have liked to see more Vik)

The Story:

I’ve been crap at writing reviews lately and I love this book so much I want to give it the ode it deserves but I just don’t have the words or motivation (I blame motivation on Covid) I’ll just say that Chloe and Red have worked their way into my top 10 couples… maybe even top 5.

The Random Thoughts:



The Score Card:

description

4.5 Stars
 
 
 
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review 2020-02-09 22:26
Get a Life, Chloe Brown by Talia Hibbert
Get A Life, Chloe Brown - Talia Hibbert

I received this book for free in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

 

Fibromyalgia and chronic pain were invisible afflictions, so they were easy to dismiss.

 

Chloe loves her family but is starting to feel suffocated by them, so she decides to make a list to help her get a life. On top of the list is moving into her own apartment, accomplishing this task also comes with a sexy superintendent.

Red is trying to get his confidence back after leaving an emotionally abusive relationship. His feelings for a new tenant have him more mixed up than ever.

Chloe guards her feelings well and Red gives a little too much but these two might just be perfect for each other.

 

He turned her into a complete disaster, and so, by day, she avoided his company like the bubonic plague. But at night, sometimes, she watched him paint.

 

The first in the Brown Sisters series, Chloe is the first one up for her happily ever after. Chloe has fibromyalgia, which the author did a great job portraying how this not only physically takes a toll but emotionally. The near constant pain makes Chloe a little short tempered and the background on how Chloe's fiance and some friends slowly drifted away because of how serious and consuming such an almost invisible disease is, gives reason to her closed off and grumpier personality. Red, by contrast, is a naturally open and sunshine type of guy, to the point that he ignores his own wants and needs. Our two leads are the often loved grumpy and sunshine trope.

 

Red smiled up at her. It was the kind of sweet and effortlessly handsome smile that heartthrobs deployed in rom-coms, and she didn’t trust it an inch.

 

I really enjoyed Chloe and Red in the beginning, the way they sparked off one another, even when there was some misunderstandings because they didn't know each other well enough to get the nuances underlining what they were saying to one another. I liked how they butted heads until Red gets a peek at Chloe's soft side under her tough shell. Having Red help Chloe with the items on her “Get a Life” list also worked to keep these two together. Chloe trying to help Red set-up a website for his art also worked well to get readers Red's story and what happened in London and why he lost his self-confidence. I thought the story lost some steam in the middle when Red and Chloe start to communicate by email. This worked to have them hash out some feelings and misunderstandings but it stalled their momentum a bit.

 

She saw the precise moment that he realized she was a breathless, horny little demon with a ridiculous crush on him.

 

This author's writing style and prose provided some cute, sexy, and snappy lines and moments. This wasn't as light and fluffy as the cartoon cover lead me to think it was going to be, there are plenty of curse words and open door sexiness. Chloe was the stand-out character for me and I loved her grumpiness and how around people she cared about and trusted, it peeled back to show a funny, sarcastic, and caring woman. I wish the scenes with her grandmother and sisters could have continued as much as we got in the beginning, I felt we lost that great connection after the first half. Red was lacking a certain wholeness for me, I think more scenes with his mom and his friend could have thickened up his character a bit.

 

Whether she admitted it or not, what Chloe really needed was a decent fucking friend. And what Red really wanted, badly enough to surprise himself, was to give her that. To show her every kindness she should take for granted. To make her smile and laugh and feel like herself. The way she did for him.

 

Chloe and Red's love felt somewhat rushed at the end, I wasn't sure the deepness to their love was fully on page for the time length given. There was also a misunderstanding that felt contrived, if a character is proclaiming love the way they were, it feels overly angst to have them immediately think the worst of their partner. Overall, the author managed to tackle issues like chronic illness, emotional abuse, and therapy and have her characters experience and live these in a romance story. The love was seen and felt in how Chloe and Red challenged and helped each other navigate and overcome these moments in life. Chloe's sisters were delightful and I'm anticipating their books.

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text 2020-02-07 22:40
Reading Update: 50%
Get A Life, Chloe Brown - Talia Hibbert

It has been a week, TGIF! Settling in with some popcorn and a new to me author.
The heroine’s toe point on the cover is so delightful :)

 

Get a Life, Chloe Brown by Talia Hibbert purchase link

 

Harvest Caramel Corn recipe

Extremely rich!

 

 

 

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review 2019-10-08 17:54
A little known part of history
The Third Daughter - Talia Carner
THE THIRD DAUGHTER by Talia Carner
 
Batya, the third daughter in a family of Jews forced out of their home in one of Russia’s endless pogroms, is married off to an apparently wealthy and kind American businessman. Unfortunately, his “America” is Buenos Aires, Argentina, where Batya is forced into a life as a prostitute.
 
Many young, innocent European girls fleeing hard times found themselves suffering Batya’s plight in lawless Argentina of the early 1900’s. Carner’s well researched and well written book follows Batya as she is betrayed and then sold into a form of slavery. Carner tells the stories and lives of Batya and the other residents of the brothel with great feeling, empathy and realism. When Batya is offered the possibility of helping to bring the perpetrators of these crimes to justice, it is at great personal peril.
 
 
Carner tells the tale of a little know part of Jewish and Argentine history. Her research is impeccable and her storytelling is impactful. This will be a good book for groups to discuss. 5 of 5 stars

 

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