Definitely Better Now
Books | Fiction / Women
4
Ava Robinson
A touching and deeply funny debut about starting over sober only to discover life’s biggest messes are still waiting right where you left them. The very last person anyone should worry about is Emma. Yes, hi, she’s an alcoholic. But she’s officially been sober for one entire year. That’s twelve months of better health. Fifty-two whole weeks of focusing on nothing but her nine-to-five office job, group meetings, and avoiding the kind of bad decisions that previously left her awash in shame and regret. It’s also been 365 days of not dating. And with her new dating profile, Emma, 26, of New York is ready to put herself back out there. Except—was dating always this complicated? And did Emma’s mother really have to choose now to move in with her new boyfriend? Being assigned to plan her office’s holiday party feels like icing on the suddenly very overwhelming cake until her estranged father reappears with devastating news. Icing, meet cherry on top. But then there’s Ben, the charming IT guy who, despite Emma’s awkwardness and shortcomings, seems to maybe actually get her? Sobriety is turning out to be far from the flawless future Emma had once envisioned for herself, but as she allows herself to open up to Ben and confront difficult past relationships, she’s beginning to realize that taking things one day at a time might just be the perfectly imperfect path she’s meant to be on. Bittersweet and darkly hilarious, Ava Robinson’s debut novel about navigating sobriety and complicated family dynamics is witty, heartbreaking, and profoundly relatable.
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More Details:
Author
Ava Robinson
Pages
352
Publisher
Harlequin
Published Date
2024-12-17
ISBN
0369751345 9780369751348
Community ReviewsSee all
"DNF at 37%. I just couldn’t get through this. I think it’s because the subject hits too close to home."
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Addison Wills
"4/5 ⭐️ Considering this is a book I picked up on a whim at the library because the cover was pretty, I really liked this! This was about a woman who is one year sober and is trying to navigate her job, family relationships, and her love life under this new lens. I loved how real this book felt and the way it depicted the lead’s earnestness in trying to grow and change while wrestling with her past and habits. I saw so much of myself in her (which feels inevitable because she is a 26 year old woman named Emma), but her mistakes and successes felt so relatable and realistic. There’s also a cute romance in this too (with a male lead I thought was great) and some discussions about family relationships I enjoyed. I will say there are some aspects that could have been focused on in more or less detail just for my personal taste. And somehow this book managed to feel like it had a lot going on while also nothing? But it worked for me. This lead was flawed and messy but still likable, and I was rooting for her as she was redefining what her life looked like."
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Emma Tang