


But with so much else going on in the book it was difficult to see that chemistry at times. I thought Gaia and Jacob as a couple worked well together, and the chemistry between the two was excellent. Gaia and her best friend attempt to work out their differences.Her long-lost sister has a very very odd hanger-on with her.Gaia has – surprise – a stalker/long-lost sister.Shortly afterwards her dream writing brings Jacob into those dreams…as in he is IN the dreams – and this brings about the main plot of the book of trying to unravel all of this.This leads to an (over the top) fight between both Gaia and her best friend, and Jacob and his brother.Early on, in the first couple of chapters, Gaia is caught with her best friend’s brother, Jacob, in an extremely heated embrace.I hope that it is easier to follow! I found the dreams to be such a fun part of the storyline and they moved the relationship forward each time.īut there was just so much going on in this book. It may be an issue with ARC formatting and I am curious to know how it plays out in the final copy. I thought that the setup and idea of going back and forth between Gaia’s dreams and reality to be appealing but it was more confusing than anything as it was jarring each time that we move from dream to reality because while Gaia sometimes can, and sometimes cannot, distinguish between reality – it left me *always* confused. The concept of this book is that a romance author dreams the plots of her books…relatively simple, right? Well, these dreams are magically written into her books. I love Therese Beharrie’s voice and the plot here is imaginative and creative, but I’m not sure if the execution of everything worked. And They Lived Happily Ever After by Therese Beharrie
