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Review: Writers & Lovers

Writers & Lovers

Writers & Lovers
By Lily King
Grove Press, February 2021, 336 pp.

The Short of It:

When it comes to love, do you go with the guy that feels right or the one that you can’t stop thinking about?

The Rest of It:

Blindsided by her mother’s sudden death, and wrecked by a recent love affair, Casey Peabody has arrived in Massachusetts in the summer of 1997 without a plan. Her mail consists of wedding invitations and final notices from debt collectors. A former child golf prodigy, she now waits tables in Harvard Square and rents a tiny, moldy room at the side of a garage where she works on the novel she’s been writing for six years. ~ the publisher

Lily King has a knack for writing characters who are quite messy, but also extremely likable. Casey is a mess. She’s a “creative” working on a novel. A novel that is going nowhere because every time she sits down to write, she’s overcome with doubt. She’s just not good enough. She will be living in her old, moldy apartment forever and will always be that server at the restaurant who does things in a half-assed way and kind of gets away with it. Kind of.

The one thing Casey has going for her is that people tend to want to help her. Whether it’s bringing meals to a table she’s neglected or introducing her to something she’s never really had of her own—a family. After the death of her mother, she just drifts from place to place until she falls in love with two men, at the same time.

One man, a widowed dad with two adorable boys. The other, a writer like her, good but needing the motivation to get out there and in turn, someone who understands her hesitation when it comes to her own work. One seems like a guarantee for a happy life, the other less so but more tempting.

What do you do? She grows close to the single dad and yes, his kids but she sees the writing on the wall and he’s very clear that he wants her there. All of her. How do you balance your desire for a normal family life over what you believe you were meant to be?

The other guy, is elusive. The chemistry is there but there’s a push-pull thing that confuses her. Sometimes he’s fully present and then he’s not. She goes along, making both relationships work for a little bit, but eventually she has to make a choice.

This book has everything. An endearing protagonist, inner-conflict, messy and wonderful bits about being in love, and the art of writing. It’s a perfect package.

I am becoming a huge Lily King fan. I adored her most recent book, Heart the Lover so as soon as I finished it, I found this one and I re-read passages over and over again, took screenshots and just lingered in the writing. If you want a book to make you feel things, I highly recommend King’s work.

Source: Borrowed
Disclosure: This post contains Bookshop.org affiliate links.

Review: Heart the Lover

Heart the Lover book cover.

Heart the Lover 
By Lily King
Grove Press, September 30, 2025, 256 pp.

The Short of It:

Lovely and poignant.

The Rest of It:

In the fall of her senior year of college, a young woman meets two star students from her 17th-Century Lit class: Sam and Yash. Best friends living off campus in the elegant house of a professor on sabbatical, the boys invite her into their intoxicating world of academic fervor, rapid-fire banter and raucous card games.

This is the type of story you tuck in with as it gently unfolds in beautiful little bits. I LOVED this story.

The narrator of the story is young Jordan. Not her real name, more on this later. She meets these two amazing men, both best friends to each other. Has a romantic relationship with one, and then the other, a deeper more personal friendship but is it really something more?

These three romp around the university, talking literature and live in the fancy house of a professor on sabbatical. None seem particularly well-to-do but they have plans to be successful. Where they end up? Not all that important to them.

These characters share their innermost thoughts in a quiet contemplative way. The tone that King sets up is very similar in feel to the movie The Big Chill. Close friends, lovers, intimate secrets. The plot follows them into adulthood. They are presented with challenges and doubts which threaten to break them apart. Jordan’s true identity is not immediately revealed until she figures out who she really is.

Lily King, well done. Highly recommend.

Comes out September 30, 2025

Source: Review copy sent to me by the publisher.
Disclosure: This post contains Bookshop.org affiliate links.