Meet the Hanukkah rom-com.
In this stand-alone companion to The Summer of Lost Letters (2021), Shira Barbanel is driven, intelligent, attractive, and the kind of rich that has a family mansion in Nantucket where extended family gathers for Hanukkah each year. She’s also lost, lonely, and socially awkward. This year, she wants a Hanukkah miracle of her own: to win the heart of her great-uncle’s intern—but she’s terrible at flirting. Shira works for her successes, so after spending the first night of Hanukkah snowed in with Tyler Nelson, her romantic nemesis and Nantucket neighbor, she strikes a deal: He’ll teach her to flirt in exchange for an intro to her media mogul great-uncle. It’s a rom-com, so readers will know what’s coming next—and the book delivers. Contemporary Jewish life, complete with a loving but fractious extended family (the triplet cousins are comedy gold), Chinese food on Christmas, and a little bit of history (researching a mystery box hidden in the attic), underpins the story, and while Shira is a bit shallowly drawn, watching her grow serves as a nice leitmotif for this cocoa- and snow-dusted holiday classic: If there was a Hallmark Hannukah movie tradition, this would be optioned in a heartbeat. The previous book establishes Shira and family as Sephardic; Tyler is White and Christian.
Cozy and cute.
(Romance. 12-18)