Member Reviews
This book is perfect for this time of year. Now that Halloween is behind us I thought I would get into the festive spirit and this was perfect. Set in a small village in Wales it has the small town vibes, community spirit, love and all the festivities that go with it. It’s an MM novel and follows a small book shop owner who is at risk of losing everything. His is the first LGBTQ book shop in Hay so it’s heartwarming to see everyone coming together to save it.
A fun, lighthearted read. I really enjoyed it. The author went into such detailing setting the perfect scenes with his spot on descriptions. He really has a knack for painting the perfect picture for the reader. I’ve added hay on wye to my places to visit!
Thank you NetGalley for allowing me to read this and review it.
Thank you to the author, the publisher and to NetGalley for an arc in exchange for my honest review.
I loved this little gem of a holiday story. The characters were delightful.
This book deserves 1000 stars, not 5.
Look Up, Handsome by Jack Strange is hands down my favorite book of 2024. From the enchanting setting of Hay-on-Wye to the adorable romance between two handsome men, this book had everything I love—including a mention of my favorite flowers, bluebells.
I adored how the storyline of Quinn fighting for his shop while falling for Noel mixed so perfectly with the interwoven storylines of Daniel’s struggles and Quinn’s grief of losing a parent. The continuous link of the little Christmas robin really made me well up, adding a beautifully emotional touch.
An absolutely genius addition to the book was having an LGBTQ+ bookshop housed in a church; the connotation is brilliant. All in all, this was one of the most joyous reads of 2024, and I hope to see more from Strange in the coming years.
Look Up, Handsome is definitely a cute holiday romance with its cozy small town vibes and grumpy/sunshine dynamic, but unfortunately did not hook me like I had hoped it would. There's a bit too much info dumping and being told vs shown, that just put me off it. That being said, it did have some adorable moments, but just didn't win me over.
Give me all these stories. I loved it soooo much and honestly just picked it straight up again for a re read because these characters just called to my heart and I love them so very much.
Approaching the Christmas season was the perfect time to be reading this book as I really felt the cosy vibes throughout. I was really interested in the main characters and felt so bad for Quinn’s issues with potentially losing his shop, and loved the various side characters as well. Everyone was really well developed and I loved seeing how the story would play out in the end. It was beautifully written and although I started this book rooting for the romance, I ended up needing to know what would happen with the bookshop! A fantastic read for the winter months, showing the beauty of a small town and the friendships and found family which can be formed there. Amazing!!
This book was the perfect cosy Christmas read that you will need this year. Quinn is just trying to save his queer bookshop in Hay on Wye when stunning Noah, romance writer, comes back to his home town and is now Quinn’s ultimate distraction.
Noah has his own back story going on which I actually found really endearing. Quinn’s best friend was totally adorable as well; I could totally eat up a book on her please 🙏🏼
Overall; this book was addictive, laugh out loud funny, swoon worthy, dramatic and cosy.
Thank you to NetGalley and HarperCollins UK - One More Chapter for this ARC e-copy of Look Up, Handsome by Jack Strange.
Pull your cozy armchair up to the fireplace, warm up some hot cocoa, and break out this book, marketed as a Hallmark-adjacent LGBTQ+ wintertime romance. It just wasn’t for me.
My main problem with this book is that I didn’t like Quinn, the main character, at all. Has he endured hardships in his life, including the death of a beloved parent and being gay? Yes. Is he currently being threatened with eviction from his bookshop by his own step-father? Also yes. But none of this makes me feel bad for Quinn largely due to his behavior toward others. Quinn is bitter and hateful to everyone he knows, including his so-called best friend and his own mother, who he just can’t forgive for getting remarried after her former husband’s death. This haterism also extends to people that only occasionally pop up in the narrative—the only thing you’ll know about these people is that Quinn met them once and hates them. No amount of quirky mishaps or clumsy pitfalls could make me like Quinn from the very first chapter, unfortunately.
With its aggressive cheerfulness and British-adjacent, slightly forced humor, this book reminded me a lot of Matt Cain’s “Becoming Ted,” which I read earlier this year and didn’t particularly enjoy either. I suppose there must be a market for this type of thing, and I’m just not a part of it.
☆ ☆ - OKAY / DNF
The characters are well-developed, and their chemistry is palpable, making readers root for their happiness., making it a heartwarming escape for any romance fan.
LOOK UP, HANDSOME is a queer holiday romance set in the small town of hay-on-wye in wales. quinn is the owner of the first and only queer bookshop in town—that is, until his stepdad and landlord sends him an eviction notice. quinn is determined to do whatever he needs to save his shop, but when he meets noah, a romance novelist, he can't help but be distracted.
this book has everything i love in a holiday romance and i absolutely loved it. i did find the pacing to be a bit slow in the first third, but as the story progressed, the pacing got much better. i loved the cast of characters in this book and the town coming together to help quinn save the bookshop was so heartwarming!! aside from quinn and noah's romance, i also really enjoyed quinn's relationship with hermione and how it helped him develop.
read if you like:
- grumpy/sunshine
- forced proximity
- small town romance
thanks to netgalley and one more chapter for the advanced copy!
88% into the book and I did not want to end. Look up handsome by Jack strange is that feel good romance of the hallmark movies that gives you all the warm fuzzy and cozy needed. I heard strange talking about on an interview how the book is inspired by Hallmark movies but frankly, it is better than them.
Look up, handsome is a perfect Christmas cozy read that makes you feel good about things. Just like a warm hug or a cup of hot chocolate. This book about Quinn, a small town book owner, his fight to save his bookshop, and his romance with the popular author Noah from the crux of the story. While you know the beats of the story, this one as much more than the romance of it all.
Discussing safe spaces for queer members of the society to be themselves, to have a breathing space, and just be, it showcases why these spaces are important. The ability of these spaces to provide a sense of breather from the outside world and for those related to the queer community trying to understand them providing them education and knowledge. While everyone goes about “ it is not our job to educate them” spaces like these are the ones where one is able to ask those confusing questions without the air of judgement, in trying to understand their loved ones. I think books and publishing and anything bookstore related playing a part in romance might be my favourite sub genre.
It also focuses on finding your own voice within and stand up for what believes in.
Strange’s writing is not forced but rather flows easily as events and the plot moves throughout the story. The romance between the two leads pretty cute and encapsulates the need to pause and reflect without giving in to the vulnerable situations and moments. I still need to find out how strange got Quinn the Pisces so pitch on perfect (I can see that because I am one.)
The friendship between Ivy and Quinn is cute and reminds me one from cemetery boys. I did wish it was fleshed out or given given more off time and scenes between them, to showcase their relationship more, but it was sufficient enough for the story as well.
Binge cozy cute read this Christmas season, with the fire in the background or playing on the TV, blanket, and hot chocolate.
Thank you netgalley and harper collins and one more chapter hc for the arc in exchange for an honest review
This was extremely cute & wholesome. I loved how the main characters were nerdy but didn't show it enough infront of each other.
The setting was almost like a Hallmark movie alike which made the story even more enjoyable.
Thank you Netgalley and publisher for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.
I really wanted to love this book, I mean, it's Lgbtq+, is set in a Bookshop, in Hay On Wye. What's not to love!
It just didn't work for me. I've never met two characters with less chemistry, It was awkward, clunky, and quite frankly, Noah is just a bit awful!
The sex scene on the last two pages was uncalled for especially when we have, by this point, read 300 pages, and they haven't done more than shivered when they brushed past each other. I'm all for closed door romance but then don't be talking about "veiny cocks" on the last five pages!
The only redeeming fact about this book is that it's wonderfully inclusive, and I really enjoyed that. Oh, and the Bookshop itself sounds adorable, but this is definitely a 2 star read for me, unfortunately.
This was a festive, bit of feel-good escapism! You are transported to the oldey worldey setting of Hay-on-Wye and even better to a bookshop which is located in an old church and it's nearly Christmas!
The characters are supportive, the community rallying to help Quinn when he is threatened with eviction from his rented premises. The rallying cry is spearheaded by Ivy, probably my favourite character, a forceful woman who you'd be unlikely to say no to! Although Quinn is a very likeable character who you have great sympathy with and want life to go right for him, he does come across as a bit wet, are men as emotional and really cry as much as he appears to do. Noah is comparison is a bit of a cold fish!
The plot is easy to follow although a bit of a slow burner, overall a cosy heart warming romance with a number of graphic sex scenes, that seem at odds with the cosy feel of the rest of the book.
This book had a lot of concepts going for it. I liked the premise, the cover, and it is rated pretty highly. But none of them helped it for me. I honestly would have put this book down in the first chapter if it wasn’t an ARC copy.
I personally cannot stand the writing style here. It reads to me as extremely juvenile. The dialogue is stilted and unnatural, and I picture middle schoolers when they all talk. There’s also a lot of information dumping about things that we either could have learned later or through dialogue that the characters should have already known about each other considering. The progression of the plot is, to me, shaky at best. It seems more like convenience than actual progression a lot of the time, and it didn’t make me emotionally invest in the story or the characters.
And the main character wasn’t particularly someone I’m inspired to stick around and get to know. There was a lot of telling us how he was feeling and/or what he was thinking instead of letting us put things together ourselves. He also just didn’t draw me. The best friend read to me like a middle school diva helping the loser kid. And the love interest was crass or nowhere to be found for a great deal of the novel.
Thank you to netgalley and the publisher for the arc in exchange for an honest review.
DNF at 42%.
Look Up, Handsome is a holiday rom com featuring a bookshop and a hot author love interest - what's not to love? I was interested in both of protagonist Quinn's professional conflicts - rescuing his bookshop from his stepfather's clutches, and pursing his own dream of authorship. But I didn't feel any chemistry (beyond physical attraction) between Quinn and Noah, and the pages felt clunky and overlong. Eventually I had to let this one go.
Firstly thank you to NetGalley, Harper Collins and One More Chapter for the advanced readers copy in exchange for an honest review.
My first festive read of the year and what a wonderful way to get into the festive spirit. I adored this story. I fell into the narrative right away and I adored the main character Quinn, we get the story from his POV. He is living my dream life. I only wish his bookshop was real for me to visit. His friends and family make for wonderful side characters especially Ivy and Bloody Blair Beckett. Noah is a gorgeous and brooding love interest and an author to boot. Shame he's obsessed with London!
Harold the step father was the perfect scrooge in this story. I'm a solicitor who works for landlords and I wanted to check the legitimacy of the eviction! Maternity has not turned that part of my brain off fully haha.
I won't give away too much of the plot so as not to spoil it but the premise of saving a queer bookshop before Christmas was wonderful and executed beautifully by Jack's writing. I also like Hermoines story and the double standards when it comes to women and sex. I highly recommend!
#bookreview #bookish #books #reading #netgalley #lgbtq #Christmas #Christmasromance #queerlove ##lgbtqfiction #getjacktohay
Festive Treat
A good cosy read with very likeable character’s. Quinn owns Hay-on-Wyes only queer bookshop and when it’s threatened with closure he is desperate to save it. Then romantic novelist Noah arrives in Town and soon becomes a distraction for Quinn. A great debut novel for Jack Strange.
Thank you NetGalley for the ARC. This book is adorable and so cute. I love all things bookshop, Christmas, and crushes.
A slow burn small town read where he falls first, but which he falls?
This hy as cozy winter holiday vibes with the spicier bits off the page. Will the forced proximity and grumpy/sunshine ways bring us a happy-ever-after?
From the beautiful cover to the character and plot arc it's time to dive into a story about a romance writer and a romance book junkie in their quest for a happy-ever-after.