ALC/ARC Book Review: For the Record by Emma Lord

Rating: ★★★.75ish
Audience: Contemporary Romance
Length: 336 pages
Author: Emma Lord
Publisher: St. Martin’s Griffin
Release Date: August 12th, 2025
Image & Other Reviews on: Goodreads

BOOK SUMMARY:

An electrifying rom com of rivalry and redemption, perfect for fans of Emily Henry and Daisy Jones and the Six, from New York Times bestselling author Emma Lord.

Once the most notorious rivals in the music scene, pop princess Mackenzie Waters and punk rockstar Sam Blaze electrified audiences as their bands clashed on stage. But behind the scenes, their simmering tension grew into something more — until suddenly both bands fell apart, and the idea of Mackenzie and Sam did, too.

Two years later, Sam has traded the rockstar lifestyle for a quiet life raising the son he didn’t know about. Meanwhile, Mackenzie is dealing with a postoperative change in her voice by only singing under a pseudonym. The only way to revive their public careers? A joint comeback album.

With fans over the moon and their futures on the line, Sam and Mackenzie face their biggest challenge yet: giving up the old rivalry and learning to work together. But as old sparks fly and new secrets emerge, they set off a chain reaction neither of them could have anticipated — one that proves that sometimes, the greatest hits are the ones yet to be written.

Thank you to Macmillan Audio for the gifted audiobook and SMP Romance for the eARC.

I THINK I LIKED IT?

Here we are with the second adult romance from Emma Lord and I still enjoy her YA/NA books more. This wasn’t bad, but there’s some kind of imbalance still between the plot and romance that bugged me.

What I will say is the banter and flirting was TOP NOTCH between Sam and Mackenzie. It was perfectly heated and the audiobook narrator nailed it. I was in love from the get go with Sam’s persona. WE LOVE A MAN DOWN BAD FOR YEARS.

And I also loved the blended family, co-parent situation. It was wholesome and for the good of the child and I appreciated seeing a healthy dynamic like this in a book.

One of the sub-plots kind of overtook Mackenzie and Sam’s story in the last quarter of the book. And while it was great to see Mackenzie reconnect with her friend and finally get some details that had been withheld the entire book I thought it could have been a lesser plot point (alongside that third act, booooooooo).

I am still a fan of Emma Lord and will continue reading her books. Definitely try the audiobook if you plan to read this one!! It’s dual POV so there are two narrators!!

Overall audience notes:

  • Contemporary Romance
  • Language: moderate
  • Romance: 3+ open door
  • Violence: mild
  • Content notes: parental abandonment, life-threatening illness

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Book Review: The Rose in the Shadows (House of Hyrax #1) by Arcadia Rayne

Rating: ★★★
Audience: Fantasy Romance
Length: 425 pages
Author: Arcadia Rayne
Publisher: Self Published
Release Date: April 11th, 2024
Image & Other Reviews on: Goodreads

BOOK SUMMARY:

“I was not created to back down”

When you’re the last Descendant of the most hated God in all the realms, who can you trust?

Theadora Moore, with no memories of her past life, arrives at the Athenian Palace with magic in her veins and a mark on her chest branding her the last living Descendant of Hyrax, God of the Dead. After seeing her as an opportunity to bolster his nations power, Prince Clayton Vail forces her into a role she never wanted. But when mysterious attacks plague the castle, it becomes clear that not everyone is thrilled about the return of House Hyrax.

To stay alive and uncover her past, Thea must master her powers, navigate treacherous court politics, and decide who she can trust in a castle brimming with the children of Gods.

In this world of magic and intrigue, friendships are fragile, and enemies lurk at every turn. As Thea and Clayton’s fates become increasingly entwined, their icy hostility starts to thaw, igniting a slow-burn romance that will change the realms forever.

The House of Hyrax series is an action-packed slow-burn romance filled with magic and political intrigue, perfect for fans of From Blood and Ash and Red Queen.

LOST INTEREST.

This started off well and I was interested in the story unfolding, but as the book went on I started to lose interest or care for anything happening. I feel like aspects such as the romance weren’t well developed and even though it is a slow burn, the couple didn’t spend enough time together for Thea to be declaring she was in love.

And the antagonists were plain. The “bad” king was lack luster and trying too hard. I liked when the meddling gods came into play because I felt like the stakes actually rose at that point. I didn’t mind Thea as the FMC, though the more I think about it, she did go along with everything so easily and I wish there was more pushback.

There’s some intriguing moments and there is a decent amount of action. It’s not unnecessarily long or drawn out, I just think different pieces could have used a little more. I don’t think I’ll continue this series.

Overall audience notes:

  • Fantasy Romance
  • Language: moderate
  • Romance: 1 almost open door
  • Violence: high
  • Content Warnings: assault, murder, near death experiences, torture

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Book Review: Daisy Haites: The Great Undoing (Magnolia Parks Universe #4) by Jessa Hastings

Rating: ★★★★
Audience: Contemporary Romance
Length: 496 pages
Author: Jessa Hastings
Publisher: Dutton
Release Date: November 7th, 2023
Image & Other Reviews on: Goodreads

BOOK SUMMARY:

THE BRAND NEW NOVEL IN THE MAGNOLIA PARKS UNIVERSE FROM BOOKTOK ROMANCE SENSATION JESSA HASTINGS

“It’s the great undoing of my heart as I know it.”

Daisy Haites thought she’d left everything about her old life in the the crime, her family, and the man she loves. But when her safety is threatened once again, she finds herself back under the watchful eyes of her gang-lord brother, Julian , and her ex-boyfriend, Christian , both desperate to keep her safe.

Everything gets more complicated when beautiful, broken-hearted socialite Magnolia Parks enters the scene and Julian finds himself entangled with her. Because, for Julian, falling in love isn’t just unwelcome—it could be deadly for everyone involved.

WAS THIS SUPPOSED TO MAKE ME FEEL BETTER?

Y’ALL. WHAT AM I DOING WITH MY LIFE. Why am I still here reading this series? But I can’t stop?

I will say that this is my favorite book of the series so far. Because I love Julian so dang much. BUT I AM HURT. I AM HURT BY THIS BOOK. And I can’t even address everything because that would be way too spoilered fill for y’all. But IYKYK.

And I guess I like Daisy? I don’t know, she was still as frustrating as Magnolia and BJ. But maybe to a slightly lesser degree. Circle back when I read the next book.

This review was completely nonsensical so TL;DR, yeah I’m reading the next book.

Overall audience notes:

  • Contemporary Romance
  • Language: moderate – strong
  • Romance: brief open door
  • Violence: moderate
  • Content warnings: infidelity, alcohol and drug use, death of a sibling, car accident, kidnapping

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Book Review: Past Present Future (Rowan & Neil #2) by Rachel Lynn Solomon

Rating: ★★★★★
Audience: NA Contemporary Romance
Length: 384 pages
Author: Rachel Lynn Solomon
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Release Date: June 4th, 2024
Image & Other Reviews on: Goodreads

BOOK SUMMARY:

They fell for each other in just twenty-four hours. Now Rowan and Neil embark on a long-distance relationship during their first year of college in this romantic, dual points of view sequel to Today Tonight Tomorrow .

When longtime rivals Rowan Roth and Neil McNair confessed their feelings on the last day of senior year, they knew they’d only have a couple months together before they left for college. Now summer is over, and they’re determined to make their relationship work as they begin school in different states.

In Boston, Rowan is eager to be among other aspiring novelists, learning from a creative writing professor she adores. She’s just not sure why she suddenly can’t seem to find her voice.

In New York, Neil embraces the chaos of the city, clicking with a new friend group more easily than he anticipated. But when his past refuses to leave him alone, he doesn’t know how to handle his rapidly changing mental health—or how to talk about it with the girl he loves.

Over a year of late-night phone calls, weekend visits, and East Coast adventures, Rowan and Neil fall for each other again and again as they grapple with the uncertainty of their new lives. They’ve spent so many years at odds with each other—now that they’re finally on the same team, what does the future hold for them?

LOVED THIS.

There was something so true to life in this book that spoke to my previous college aged self on multiple levels. I loved that I got to see Neil and Rowan struggle. It was the good kind of struggle, the one where you know they’ll make it, they just have to tousle with some things. And tussle they did. Exploring the depth of their relationship, making long distance work, learning to communicate, figuring out college, it’s all there and it’s all beautiful. I feel like we don’t get many books of a couple after they get together and I didn’t find this story boring or slow in any context. The plot was exactly as it should be to see Neil and Rowan and that invisible string between them.

I loved both of these characters together and separate. And those are the best kind of books for me. Neil’s depression was such a hit to my soul and the representation of that was so well handled. Seeing both of them navigate friendships and new cities brought back a lot of the same things I used to feel in school. I loved this book (the audio is great) and it’s definitely worth picking up if you enjoyed the first.

Overall audience notes:

  • NA Contemporary Romance
  • Language: low-moderate
  • Romance: 3 vague open door
  • Content Warnings: parent who’s incarcerated, depression depiction

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