
One Golden Summer by Carley Fortune
Content:
꧁•⊹٭ small town ༊*·˚. friends to lovers ༊*·˚. friends with benefits ༊*·˚. rich hero ༊*·˚. slow burn ༊*·˚. summer reads ٭⊹•꧂
Review
This was better than all the others released since Every Summer After, but still wasn’t anything nearly as good as that one to me. I enjoyed the banter. They have good chemistry. But the pacing draaagged for me. A usual it was bit boring and it lacked a real conflict.
I keep trying reading her in hopes to find the writing I fell in love with in Every Summer After, but I don’t think I ever will again.
“I think of all the times in my life when I’ve stayed quiet because it was more comfortable than speaking up.”
“I’m turning thirty-three tomorrow. You’d think I’d be a little braver.” “I think the older we get, the scarier shit becomes.”
“When you aren’t staring at him, he’s staring at you. It’s like watching a tennis match.”
Blurb
A radiant, new escape to the lake from #1 New York Times bestselling author Carley Fortune
I never anticipated Charlie Florek.
Good things happen at the lake. That’s what Alice’s grandmother says, and it’s true. Alice spent just one summer at a cottage with Nan when she was seventeen—it’s where she took that photo, the one of three grinning teenagers in a yellow speedboat, the image that changed her life.
Now Alice lives behind a lens. As a photographer, she’s most comfortable on the sidelines, letting other people shine. Lately though, she’s been itching for something more, and when Nan falls and breaks her hip, Alice comes up with a plan for them both: another summer in that magical place, Barry’s Bay. But as soon as they settle in, their peace is disrupted by the roar of a familiar yellow boat, and the man driving it.
Charlie Florek was nineteen when Alice took his photo from afar. Now he’s all grown up—a shameless flirt, who manages to make Nan laugh and Alice long to be seventeen again, when life was simpler, when taking pictures was just for fun. Sun-slanted days and warm nights out on the lake with Charlie are a balm for Alice’s soul, but when she looks up and sees his piercing green gaze directly on her, she begins to worry for her heart.
Because Alice sees people—that’s why she is so good at what she does—but she’s never met someone who looks and sees her right back.

