Stuck in a time loop, two people must fall in love in order to break out.
When Gemma runs into Jack—literally—at a Los Angeles coffee shop, there's something strangely familiar about him. In fact, Gemma has been having moments of déjà vu all morning. Now, Jack tries to convince her that they’ve been stuck repeating the same day for almost five months. Having been aware of the “temporal anomaly” the whole time, Jack is already madly in love with Gemma and believes that if she can fall in love with him, too, they’ll be freed. Gemma is understandably skeptical, but with encouragement from Jack and her best friend, Lila, she tentatively indulges the theory. What follows is a daylong adventure, taking them from the radio station where Gemma works to the television set where Jack is a writer as well as Caltech, LAX, and the Hollywood Bowl. Along the way, they make major discoveries and positive changes to their lives that they wouldn’t have done without each other. But Gemma has been betrayed before, and when they hit an emotional stumbling block, she flees. Will they reunite before the day is over? Consent is tricky business in this novel; while the reader has evidence that Jack is telling the truth, Gemma has none besides an uncanny sense of familiarity. James does a laudable job emphasizing Jack’s desperation and adoration, the sparks that fly between him and Gemma, and the way they make each other’s lives better, but whether that justifies the power of experience he has over her or his ability to manipulate is debatable. Additionally, Lila, an influencer, posts a video of Gemma and Jack to her socials that becomes a viral sensation—all without asking. While this doesn’t pose a problem for the characters, it may for readers.
Readable and sweet but with a flawed premise.