This Chick Read: Fake Skating by Lynn Painter

Dani grew up an army brat, moving around constantly and never making great friends. The only constant in her life was she and her mom’s trips back to Minnesota every summer where she would hang out with her mom’s best friend’s son, Alec who was kind of nerdy and a little soft. They promised they’d always stay in touch, until they didn’t. Five years later and Dani and her mom are back in Minnesota. Her parents are going through a divorce and they will be living with her grandpa for the final few months of her senior year in college. Here she is the new girl again but at least she’d have her friend Alec, right? Only that nerdy little friend has turned into ‘Zeus’ the semi-god who is taking their high school hockey team to the finals. They meet again as strangers and everything is super awkward. When an unlikely series of events has them fake dating they finally face what happened to their friendship and if they can overcome hurt feelings and face the truth.

Lynn Painter sure knows how to paint a great back story for her characters. Dani’s emotional journey from loner who doesn’t want to trust anyone to gradually entrusting her heart to Alec again was really well done. This young adult novel had all the feels of an adult romance without the spice. Dani had all the emotions of an adult and none of the stupid behaviours that come from being a teenager. Alec, was the more juvenile of the two, but that seems par for the course on where young girls and boys are emotionally at that time in their lives. I think Dani also had so much more to forgive and move on from- not just her past with Alec, but the divorce of her parents, and reconnecting with her once close grandfather. The author portrayed all of these things beautifully and I bought into all the plots and sub plots.

Not to say that Alec was one dimensional, because he wasn’t. However, he held onto his grudges much more than Dani so it was easier to get caught up in her journey versus Alec’s. I do love a great hockey story though, so his push to win a championship and move on to college or go pro created conflict for his character that was separate from his feelings on what happened with Dani in the past. I do wish he hadn’t been given the nickname Zeus though, I just hated that moniker. No high schooler is god-like, no matter their athletic prowess.

I really enjoyed this story and Lynn Painter has quickly become a favorite author. No matter if it’s YA or an adult romance, her story’s deliver, and her characters are always real. She’s become a must-buy for me. ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

I received a copy of this book through NetGalley for an honest review and it was honest!

Click this link to purchase this book!* Fake Skating

Copyright 2025 The Reading Chick All Rights Reserved

*Amazon Associate- if you purchase this book through the above link I’ll receive a small stipend.

This Chick Read: The Calculation of You and Me by Serena Kaylor

Navigating high school is difficult for a math nerd but Marlowe Meadows had managed to gain the attention of the most popular boy in school and for two years was half of that golden couple. When he suddenly breaks up with her stating that she isn’t very romantic she is determined to win him back. When she gets paired with black clothes, guyliner wearing rocker Ashton Hayes for an English project she reads some poetry he’s written and asks him to help her become more romantic and win her ex back. He’ll help her write some love letters and she’ll help his band go viral. As they spend more time together and she starts to develop feelings Marlowe wonders if there isn’t a perfect formula for love. How could she have gotten things so wrong?

After reading Serena Kaylor’s debut novel Long Story Short I knew I was going to pick up her next young adult novel. She seems to favor math nerds for heroine’s and I love a good STEM romance. In The Calculation of You and Me Marlowe is on the spectrum as well as being a math nerd and her ability to read nuances and jokes are difficult for her. This made what her ex said to her especially brutal and Ash’s appreciation of these traits more romantic and sweet. Needless to say I wanted her to stop trying to win back her douchebag ex and fall for Ash but she needed to figure things out at her own pace and it was totally fun to read her journey.

Learning how to be more romantic included a series of “lessons” set up like dates, as well as reading all the different romance tropes. It was fun to see this young math nerd open up to romance by doing something all of us readers already enjoy. Reading romance novels! I loved how she and her girlfriends found this new world of happily ever afters. This was just icing on the cake of a very good story already but it did make it a bit more fun. ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

I received a copy of this book through NetGalley and the publisher for an honest review and it was honest!

Click this link to purchase this book!* The Calculation of You and Me

Copyright 2024 The Reading Chick All Rights Reserved

*Amazon Associate- if you purchase this book through the above link I’ll receive a small stipend.

This Chick Read: Borrow My Heart by Kasie West

Wren is sitting in her favorite coffee shop sipping a brew when she sees two cute boys and overhears their conversation. One of them, Asher, has been communicating with a girl online and his friend is telling him he’s being catfished. Totally going outside her comfort zone, Wren decides to pose as this girl and save Asher from an embarrassing decision. The problem is that she never gets the chance to tell him that she isn’t that girl and ends up really liking him. How will she finally confess the truth?

Borrow My Heart was typical Kasie West with interesting characters and a story that has a huge heart. Wren’s back story made her someone who protects her heart against hurt living by a set of rules she’s made that puts a wall between she and anyone who tries to get close. On the flip side, Asher is an open book. He’s sweet, easy to talk to and seems to prop her up when her insecurities make her want to hide her heart. The perfectly complemented each other and it was easy to see how they would work as a couple. I was totally on team Wrasher!

The reader is in on Wren’s secret the entire time she’s developing a relationship with Asher which amps up the tension because we know that train wreck is coming. Although, truthfully, Asher seems like such a sweet guy that I can’t believe he wouldn’t be understanding. What actually happens, I did not see coming. Which made this story totally fun to read.

This is a young adult novel that has a lot of heart and a considerable amount of angst. It surprised me, which made me like it more than I had initially thought I would. Never underestimate this author, it’s rare that she doesn’t deliver a great story. ❤️❤️❤️❤️

I received a copy of this book through NetGalley and the publisher for an honest review and it was honest.

Click this link to purchase this book!* Borrow My Heart

Copyright 2023 The Reading Chick All Rights Reserved

*Amazon Associate-if you purchase this book through the above link I’ll receive a small stipend.

This Chick Read: The Renaissance of Gwen Hathaway by Ashley Schumacher

Madeline Hathaway is home-schooled and lives on the road with her parents, traveling from one city to the next on the Renaissance faire circuits. When her mother dies, she and her father soldier on despite her mother being the glue that kept their family talking. She knows her father loves her, but Madeline finds that she’s mostly on her own once they hit a new town. While checking out the changes at one of she and her mom’s favorite fairgrounds she meets Arthur, a lute playing young bard, and son to the King’s of the castle. He talks her into being the Princess of the Faire, and challenges her to be his partner on a few road-trip adventures. She is out of her comfort zone but Madeline (who he insists on calling Gwen) decides to take fate into her own hands learning some things about herself that might change her future.

This was a really sweet young adult novel about two kids who are going through personal struggles while also feeling insecure about how they fit into their teen world. Arthur is a totally sweet boy being raised by two dad’s, and despite their strong parenting he’s insecure about his looks and how he fits into his high school clicque. Madeline, who’s never gone to high school, doesn’t have that same issue, but she does have insecurity about her weight and whether she can ever live up to the beautiful free spirit that was her mother. She is also mourning her mom and struggling to communicate with an also mourning father which adds to her issues. The two of them find each other when they need each other the most and you can’t help but feel charmed by the mystical, fun Renaissance Faire setting.

I like how Madeline has so many sides to her. She is talking to a therapist, trying to hold her family together, keeping her mom’s memory alive, and also trying to be a teen age girl with her first crush- although she fights that almost to the bitter end. Despite all of her issues, her character is strong, opinionated, and funny. She was an easy girl to identify with and like, for sure. Arthur was a little bit more of a caricature, with his two gay dads and his charming personality, but once you read further you realized that despite seeming like he’s got it all he’s kind of a mess as well and you can’t help but hope he and Madi get their act together and realize they can be stronger with each other than without.

I love the whole Renaissance faire vibe. It’s a great setting for a young romance! Turkey legs, costumes, and joust’s oh my! There were moments of absolute delight mixed in with the more serious subjects that gave this story a well-roundedness that made it a delight. If you’re in the mood for a young adult novel with some depth, but is still fun, give this one a try! ❤️❤️❤️❤️

I received a copy of this book through NetGalley for an honest review and it was honest.

Click this link to purchase this book!* The Renaissance of Gwen Hathaway

Copyright 2023 The Reading Chick All Rights Reserved

*Amazon Associate- if you purchase this book through the above link I’ll receive a small stipend.