Member Reviews
A funny, fresh and witty book which weaves past and present together.
This is an easy read, light and fun and is ideal as a gentle and amusing read with flashes of zany humour
This book is highly addictive. It captured my interest from the very first page. I absolutely loved this book and will be looking for more titles by this author.
An incredibly cute story about Luca’s trip to her former uni roommate’s wedding, where she meets up with her 5 former housemates, 1 ex-boyfriend, her arch rival, a new love interest, and the man she still loves (the one who got away).
This story is told through a series of flashback chapters mixed with current story, the results are a heart felt, full story. I really liked this one.
This had been a quick read, with funny scenes, witty dialogue and weird coincidences! Perfect for anyone who wants to have the time of our live!
I already know that Portia Macintosh books are always refreshing and leave a smile on your face, this case is not an exception, but maybe the smile is much bigger than any previous book!
We will start this book following Luca who is going to a wedding, a wedding she doesn’t want to go, but know that she can not miss… one of her old friends from Uni is marrying, this means that she will reunite with all her old friends and she will have to remember how her heart was broken in a thousand pieces. What she doesn’t expect is to meet again the guilty person who broke her heart, will the feelings return?
Luca will not have the time of her live, as you can expect; she will meet with the ex-boyfriend Alan (now called Al Atlantic), the guy who broke her heart (Nathan) and an interesting new guy, maybe the love of her life? (Ed) But don’t expect to only read Luca’s love life, you’ll meet all her old friends too; and they are quite a group, don’t doubt it!
The story will be told between the present (the wedding) and some memories of the group from the past; Luca’s friends are special, they all have their faults, and some of their worst moments will be remembered during the wedding, but who didn’t do anything wrong during Uni? You’ll have to read The Time of Our Lives if you want to know some of the moments!
I liked how all the characters at the end of the story try to connect all their faults, like trying to justify that everything that they did in the past was to be in this special moment in the present. Maybe is true maybe not, but now I have a happy face remembering the book, so I prefer to think that is true! 😉
This had way too much drama! I didn't like any of the characters and I found I was not even a little bit interested in the story. The women were catty, judgemental, and mean to each other and I had not interest in continuing after the first part of the book. It didn't really dig to deep into anything either and I would have like more substance to the story.
I love being in Portia MacIntosh world and after reading this book had just one question? How does she always manage to create characters that I feel like I knew before I read her book? If anyone knows the answer, please feel free to let me know and also tell me which of her books is your favourite? I have to say that as much as I enjoyed Summer Secrets at the Apple Blossom Deli and Love and Lies at The Village Christmas Shop, I do love the style of writing in Time of Our Lives and her earlier books. Not that she can't do both brilliantly, I just think she's amazing at first person, quirky stories, of which I could read an anthology of...next book Portia?? ;)
The Time of Our Lives, is an upbeat, non stop, laugh out loud read, that drew me in and had me sinking into my couch that little bit more and assuring myself just one more chapter was absolutely fine at 11 o'clock at night!! It reminded me of movies like 'House Bunny' and 'Sydney White' in a good way, pretty much any movie with a university theme really. I say that because Portia's writing makes it feel so vivid that it's like I was actually watching a movie play out in my head. I know technically you may do that with every book you read, but I don't feel like all are this action packed and real and make you feel like you've just watched a whole movie when you've read the last chapter. Have any books made you feel like this? Let me know!!
Luca is now my new best friend, I'm pretty certain I have a 27 dresses line up going now with all of Portia's characters, but that's another good movie so #winning! She was fun, she was practical, she tried to keep her shit together, even though let's face it, we all have our moments and I just loved her. She overthought certain things, she went with the flow, there was just so much of her that made me connect to her and that's what I adore so much about Portia's writing. She truly makes you connect to the characters, even if they can often be quite bold or say things or dress the way I would never dress, I somehow finish the book feeling like "yep that was so me, she's me and we are now best friends because of it" - an actual conversation in my head.
As for Tom - oooh he was a tricky one!! At first I was like "Dude just tell her the truth" because I was starting to second guess things myself and was wondering how he could be so perfect and thinking "what is going on with you?" - You're getting completely inside my brain with this review, it's like a gift that keeps on giving! He worried me at the start and I was concerned for Luca and almost wanted her to leave him be, but as the story progressed I wanted to know more about him and I softened a little, okay a lot, he really was rather perfect. His and Luca's whole story and friendship was all so sweet and serendipitous!
It was entertaining, it was fun, it was over way too quickly - my fault, not Portia's - and now I'm back to waiting, like a puppy at the front door - metaphorically not physically - for Portia's next one! The Time of Our Lives should definitely be on your reading list!
A lovely story, funny, warm, full of great characters you can relate to, a great light summer read. A few unnecessary scenes and a bit mad at times, but that’s half the fun sometimes
Thanks to netgalley and the publisher for a free copy for an honest opinion
Witty, addictive, and undeniably romantic!
The Time of Our Lives is a lighthearted, comical read that takes you into the life of the ordinary, but content Luca as she dreadingly travels to the wedding of her old flatmates and embarks on a weekend that includes reminiscing with old friends, a blossoming new love interest, and being reunited with the one that got away.
The writing is sentimental and whimsical. The characters are multi-layered, gregarious, and endearing. And the plot, using flashbacks to the past is an enticingly nostalgic tale full of secrets, friendship, chemistry, humorous moments, romantic drama, self-reflection, and hilarious mishaps.
Overall, The Time of Our Lives is another uplifting, humorous, addictively entertaining tale by MacIntosh that is perfect for anyone who loves a will-they-or-won’t-they romance that’s not only heartwarming but laugh-out-loud funny.
Thank you to Portia MacIntosh and HQ Digital for providing me with a copy in exchange for an honest review.
So does fate really exist when it comes to your love life? That is the question that I am left pondering after reading The Time of Our Lives, where you learn about a series of events, which if they hadn't occurred in the order they did may have led to a vastly different outcome.
Luca is dreading going to wedding of one of her old uni flatmates, as she is the only one from their group that is still single. So imagine her surprise when there is an ex boyfriend at the wedding too, the man she almost got together with one New Years Eve, 10 years ago, and a seemingly too good to be true man all vying for her attention.
Add in being roped in as a last minute extra bridesmaid, and you still haven't scratched the surface of what happens at this wedding.
In addition to the wedding, we are treated to flashbacks of the year or so that the group all lived together, not always in chronological order, but in a way designed to drip feed their pasts, and understand fully just how they have arrived at the situations they are now in.
Expect lies and secrets to be uncovered, definitely some romance, plenty of comedy, and just a massively gripping story, as everything is untangled.
This is a cleverly crafted tale that is incredibly enjoyable, and it will certainly entertain you.
Thank you to Netgalley and HQ Digital for this copy which I have reviewed honestly and voluntarily,
Romance is not my usual genre, but a fresh, original voice with a sense of humor will sometimes reel me in. With "The Time of Our Lives," Portia MacIntosh got me. Her narrative reminds me in a good way of "The Neanderthal's Aunt" by Dr. Gina DeMarco (which a friend read at my insistence and two-starred, to my amazement; it's five stars all the way!). "The Time of Our Lives" also reminds me in a good way of "Hyperlink from Hell: A Couch Potato's Guide to the Afterlife" (not a romance, not really) by Lindy Moone. I can't resist the quirky humor and crazy antics. Fans of TV shows like "Friends" and "The Big Bang Theory" might gravitate to this romance for the cast of college kids meeting up ten years later at a wedding.
What set this romance apart from the usual is the way the cast of characters alternate from past (college roommates) to present (yes, the whole novel takes place at a wedding). With each flashback to college days, a new insight is revealed, and as the end rolls at us like a runaway train, we discover the extremes of loyalty, the cost, the consequences. A Catwoman costume. A dog in the road. People leaping to the wrong conclusion. People telling white lies to save a friend from the unthinkable.
On the one hand, I kept getting annoyed with the heroine who, like too many others, lacks "agency" - things happen, and she accepts them as her lot in life, her fate, or just Things That Happen, and I'd have liked to see her have more faith in herself and fight harder for what is hers. But that would deny us the fun of the novel, and the agony of "Why didn't you just ---"? One reason we love stories is that we see how wrong, how irrational, other people can be. They drive me crazy. And then I realize I'm just as guilty of assuming the worst and failing to fight harder against an opponent trying to usurp what I could, and should, and must claim as my own.
Some of the one-star reviewers fault the story for "stupid" people doing stupid things, but to me, that is not a fair analysis of a novel. Romeo and Juliet were the penultimate idiots. If this were not so, we'd have no story. I've strived to avoid spoilers, so let me warn you not to read the one-star reviews on Goodreads. Spoilers! and (if you ask me), spoil-sports. This novel is not for literary scholars. It's sheer, unadulterated fun. Thank you, Portia MacIntosh, for a much-needed bit of escapism.
I'd cite excerpts from the text, but this is a NetGalleyARC with the usual disclaimer about not quoting from anything but the final, published copy.
The Time Of Our Lives by Portia MacIntosh is a feel-good contemporary novel that shows the bond between a group of friends.
The action alternates between a present day wedding and 2008. It shows the impact that choices in the past have on present day life. Different choices would have revealed very different results.
There is a wonderful eclectic mix of friends who met at uni, paired up and are now living adult lives. There is good natured teasing and bonds that the reader feels will last a lifetime. There are some highly amusing situations including a rescue from a pond. The reader can ‘feel’ a force of attraction that the characters are trying to deny. There is good natured banter.
Within the group of couples, the reader senses the awkwardness of being single. Singleness is not always welcomed. It can be a state of mind as we see some singles having fun.
This novel is about friendship. There are great lengths that some will go to, to protect their friends. Friendship is to be celebrated.
I love Portia MacIntosh’s books. The characters are quirky but realistic and likable. The Time Of Our Lives is a delightful fun read, just perfect for long summer evenings… or cold winter nights.
I received this book for free. A favourable review was not required and all views expressed are my own.
Nope not for me. I hate when the heroine on the book is spinless and the reasons and excuses of my everyone is the way they are because of their past is so boring.
It is a fun and entertaining story that hooks from the first page.
A group of friends from the university meet at the wedding of one of them after ten years without seeing each other. On this special day, many secrets will be uncovered that until then they have been strongly kept.
Luca, is the main character of this novel and fate will want her to meet Tom again. Ten years have passed since Tom broke her heart and all because of a misunderstanding provoked in the New Year's Eve party, and perhaps also because none of them had the courage to confess the true feelings they really felt for each other. It seems that a decade has not been enough time for the couple to forget the love that existed once between them.
Portia MacIntosh gets the reader to form part of this group of friends with what you can enjoy this novel to the fullest. It's the first book I've read about this author and I think it's not going to be the last.
I loved the seemless tranistion between now and the past. Luca is one of my favourite characters from this year - she's quite like me. Her impromptu bridesmaiding was hilarious! A really feel good book, and it's made me get back in touch with my college friends.
A fun easy cozy story. I enjoy the other stories from this author and this didn’t disappoint. I look forward to the next story.
I really enjoy everything Portia MacIntosh writes. Her characters are laugh-out-loud funny, yet complicated and fragile at the same time. This book did not disappoint.
I like second chance love stories, and I think Portia MacIntosh nailed this one. There are a few extra characters that seem to push the narrative a little off course, but I think when you're adding secondary characters that can happen. I enjoyed reading about the past mixed in with the present.
I received an advance copy. All thoughts are my own.
i got this book very close to the pub date, so forgive the review being a bit late. my friend recommended it and said she laughed out loud several times, so i expected to like it too. it was a fun, enjoyable read. definitely 'fluffy' (i don't think there's anything wrong with that!) or kind of like a beach read. i really liked portia and i mostly liked tom - staying with the other girl for as long as he did, even if it was only at uni, wasn't really my jam but at least there is no infidelity. i liked how portia stayed so strong towards tom for so long, when she thought he was still with the other woman or having a baby with her. she stood her ground and has no interest in him and tells him to his face. then he explains and it all works out. i thought it was very cute. i do wish there'd be an epilogue but i'll survive. the back and forth was a bit jarring at times, it felt a bit all over the place. i was very sad about the dog, glad it was okay. the friends were a hot mess. this was a very zany kind of book, reminded me of a sophie kinsella in the way that crazy things keep happening. overall, it was thoroughly enjoyable and just an all around good time.
Well, Portia MacIntosh you have gone and done it again, this is good, so good! I will admit that I am very late to discovering Ms MacIntosh’s work after only reading my first of her work at Christmas, but I am definitely well and truly a fan of hers.
The story is split between two times of Luca’s life; present day and then it flits back to her university days and I really love how this is written, it really gives and insight into what was going on and how Luca found herself where she is in her life. I found that the flashbacks to her university days really brought Luca to life and you began to understand her and her friends all the more, at times this kind of writing can be a bit confused for the reader but Ms MacIntosh has nailed it.
I really like Luca, she is a down-to-earth, likeable and very real character, she is a woman whose life hasn’t exactly gone to plan she has headed way off the planned path of life – I think every single one of us can relate to that in one way or another! Single, in a job she has come to pretty much hate and surrounded by happily married/coupled people, something she is used to, so when she is invited to the wedding of one of her oldest university friends she knows that it will end up being a reunion – and she is ready for being the only single one left amongst their little circle. She is ready to blow their socks of at what a successful woman she has become – even if that does mean buying an out fit that could make her go hungry for the next few months, but hey; she can always take it back to the shop! What she isn’t prepared for is to unexpectedly bump into the very person her broke her heart all those years ago, a man whom she says she is over but deep down she is in fact still that heartbroken young woman and seeing him again at the wedding is a real punch for her. It is bumping into Tom; the one who broke her heart, that really makes Luca start evaluating her life.
This is a great story, the present is set during the wedding and we all know what mayhem weddings can bring on their own, let alone mixing in a bunch of old friends, ex’s popping up left right and centre and a bit of a romance blossoming – but from what direction is this romance? You will just have to read it to find out! The main message I got from this above the romance, the heartbreak, the emotional upheaval was that true friendships can last forever, no matter where you are going in life, those special friendships will always be there when needed.
The Time Of Our Lives is a fun, engaging and very sweet romance that I am positive readers will relate to in some way, there is a realism about it – or more accurately about lead character; Luca. I know that a lot of readers will probably say the same, but there is something very real about Luca, she is one of those character’s that you can instantly see a certain aspect of yourself in and you just know and understand her in every way. This is so rare to find and I absolutely applaud Portia MacIntosh for writing this wonderful story, for bringing Luca into the world where we all can sit back and say; ‘That is so me’ or ‘My, goodness, yes I think that too’. I literally finished reading this, sat back and heaved a sigh, wiped a tear at the perfect story I’d just read.
Ms MacIntosh is an astounding writer, she really captures Luca in this she is so real to me, it is so rare to really connect with a character from the very first page but here I instantly did. The story really does pull at the heartstrings, you will be laughing out loud, blubbering like a baby with it’s intricately woven tale of love and friendship, there are secrets and lies some of the best wedding scenes ever – honestly think Four Weddings and a Funeral and you will know what I mean about fun and love at a wedding.
Overall, this is one of the best romantic comedy’s I have read, highly recommended and one that you will be pulling of the bookshelf to re-read.
Another great read ..
Portia always writes romance fun .
Will they won't they drama.
Easy book to read takes your mind away from real life
Luca is fine. Or isn't she? Attending another wedding of her uni's friend she realises that she's always the single one, another are engaged/married/otherwise romantically occupied. She starts to feel that time moves on while she stays in place. When she also meets Tom at the wedding, her ex/not ex - boyfriend, she starts to think and evaluate her life.
The story actually unfold on a wedding day, and it was incredibly how much can happen in a day - well, especially when you are as accident - prone as Luca, that is. The present intertwines with flashbacks to the past and we slowly get to know the characters and their lives as a group. Also, it turns out of course that there are, and were, many secrets, misunderstatements and plays. So as much as Luca is our main character, the others play as important role in the book as she is, because they helped to shape her. However, maybe because of the relatively huge number of characters, I had a feeling that they were not good enough developed. They were there, but there was not enough depth to them and to be honest, I haven't felt connection with them. I think Luca tried to be über - cool and nonchalant in her life. She was your normal, everyday girl, sharp - mouthed and generally happy with herself but I couldn't warm completely to her, to be honest, not sure why.
The humour this time was also not so Portia MacIntosh - it felt too flat and there were moments that probably were supposed to be funny, like with Luca suddenly being a bridesmaid and the bride's wishes and requests but it only felt too overdone. I also think she tried to make it a sitcom - like rom - com, with flashbacks and hilarious situations but, unfortunately it didn't work.
From the author like Portia MacIntosh I was simply expecting something better, ambitious. I was left with a feeling that she herself didn't connect with the story at all, it scratched below the surface, was without a depth. There were some moments that saved the book for me though on the whole I was really hoping for something deeper, with the MacIntosh's hallmark humour and sharp observations. Altogether, "The Time of Our Lives" was a light - hearted, easy and fairly straight - forward and predictable read but nevertheless a read that will keep you reading. The pacing was right, the dialogues dynamic and it dealt with the fact that you should fight for things that you feel will make you happy.