Book Review: The Roommate Rule by Georgia Stone

Rating: ★★★
Audience: Contemporary Romance
Length: 352 pages
Author: Georgia Stone
Publisher: Harper Perennial
Release Date: July 7th, 2026
Image & Other Reviews on: Goodreads

BOOK SUMMARY:

When two polar opposites find themselves sharing a cabin for the summer, they lay down some ground rules to keep the peace—only to discover that one of those rules might be impossible to keep in this steamy new novel from the author of The Friendship Fling.

Dylan is the kind of person who is always fifteen minutes early and never leaves things to chance—so she can’t believe she’s about to spend six weeks on a last-minute trip to Wales that she didn’t plan, living in a cabin with a man she’s only met once.

Max always goes with the flow, and after his plus-one drops out of his all-expenses-paid travel influencer trip, he’s happy for his sister’s friend to take the spot. After all, from what he remembers of their brief meeting a year ago, Dylan is the kind of woman he’d be more than happy to spend some alone time with.

Not that anything is going to happen between them, because Dylan knows getting involved with this reckless, irrepressible flirt is the last thing she needs. So she makes a house they are roommates only, and under no circumstances can anything . . . untoward . . . happen between them.

But as the days go by, Max starts to realize how much he enjoys chipping away at the walls Dylan hides herself behind, while Dylan begins to admit to herself that there may be more to Max than she first assumed. And before she knows it, she finds herself wondering if their “roommate rule” might be one rule she actually wants to break…

NOT ALL I HOPED FOR.

I adored Georgia Stone’s debut so I’ve been super excited to get my hands on this book and it ended up on KU months early??? So here we are!

I loved the concept. The setting felt absolutely gorgeous and all of the traveling and activities were fun too. Two relative strangers stuck together for six weeks?? What could happen ya know??

The first half of the book was okay. I honestly wasn’t feeling the chemistry all that much between Dylan and Max. I do think the second half got better and there was a little more romance but some of the spice overshadowed that too.

Thematically the discussions around living life and taking chances amidst not knowing if tomorrow is coming were all good. I liked the conversations and the walls coming down as Max learned to let Dylan in. Dylan was rather stubborn on her *taking care of everyone ways* but I understood and liked that she also started to let things go too.

Not a total downfall, and it is a fairly easy read, just not what I was hoping for. Maybe the next book??

Overall audience notes:

  • Contemporary Romance
  • Language: moderate
  • Romance: 3-4ish open door
  • Violence: mild
  • Content warnings: discussions around cancer and hospitalizations (theme throughout)

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ARC Book Review: Gate to Kagoshima (Ancestor Memories #1) by Poppy Kuroki

Rating: ★★★★
Audience: Historical Romance (Time Travel)
Length: 320 pages
Author: Poppy Kuroki
Publisher: Harper Perennial
Release Date: January 28th, 2025
Image & Other Reviews on: Goodreads

BOOK SUMMARY:

In this exciting historical romantasy in the spirit of The Hurricane Wars and The Time Traveler’s Wife—Outlander set in Japan—a young Scottish woman is magically transported to the last Samurai era, where she encounters ghosts from the past, her own Japanese ancestry, and a love that transcends time.

While in Japan researching her family’s history, a vicious typhoon sends Isla Mackenzie 128 years back in time, to the dawn of the Satsuma Rebellion. There she meets her ancestors, and a charismatic samurai, Kei, with whom she unexpectedly finds romance.

But, unlike her Beloved, Isla knows about the looming Samurai rebellion—and Kai’s fate. Should she attempt to change history or somehow make her way back to the life she’d had before?

Compulsively readable, historically grounded, and irresistibly immersive, Gate to Kagoshima is an unforgettable tale of duty, and of timeless love.

Thank you to the publisher for the gifted ARC and LibroFM for the audiobook.

I’LL READ BOOK TWO.

And sometimes that’s the best review I have. I also think the audiobook did a great job of upping my thoughts on this book. I was able to breeze through it quickly and the narrator did an amazing job.

This is definitely in the Outlander vibe but less wide scale. I was surprised at how short this book was and how much history it was trying to cover at the same time. I loved the historical aspects though and learning more about samurai’s and the culture of the time period.

The romance took a bit for me to get behind and I think it could have used a few more romantic notions buuut the ending scenes were super good. They very much increased my desire to read book two and see how this will continue to progress.

Overall audience notes:

  • Historical Romance
  • Language: low
  • Romance: vague open door
  • Violence: moderate

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