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Meet Me on Love Lane Kindle Edition
Charlotte Bishop is out of options in New York City. Fired, broke, and blacklisted by her former boss, she’s forced to return to her hometown of Hope Lake, PA to lick her wounds. Although she’s expecting to find a miserable place with nothing to do, she is pleasantly surprised to discover it is bustling and thriving.
She’s only supposed to be in Hope Lake temporarily until she can earn enough money to move back to New York. She’s not supposed to reconnect with her childhood friends or her beloved grandmother. She’s not supposed to find her dream job running the local florist shop. And she’s definitely not supposed to fall for not one but two of Hope Lake’s golden boys: one the beloved high school English teacher, the other the charming town doctor.
With a heart torn between two men and two cities, what’s a girl to do?
A perfect blend of humor and heart, Meet Me on Love Lane is the second in a new series from USA TODAY bestselling author Nina Bocci that is sure to charm fans of Josie Silver and Sally Thorne.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherGallery Books
- Publication dateDecember 10, 2019
- File size4.9 MB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"A sweet exploration of what it means to come home again… With a relatable heroine, witty dialogue, and an idyllic setting, Meet Me On Love Lane is a contemporary romance that is essentially a Hallmark movie on paper. While it's perfect as a standalone, readers will enjoy visiting Hope Lake time and time again.” (Booklist)
“In the feel-good second installment of Bocci’s Hopeless Romantics series… the idyllic setting is vividly rendered and Charlotte’s personal growth as she builds a home for herself is handled with compassion. Readers will enjoy this sweet, fluffy tale that sits squarely at the intersection of romance and women’s fiction.” (Publishers Weekly)
“Filled with small-town charm and a sweet cast of characters.” (Woman's World (Best of Week Book Club pick))
"A feel-good romance that will add a spring to your step and light a fire in your heart, Meet Me on Love Lane was a heartfelt follow up from one of my new favorite authors, Nina Bocci." (Harlequin Junkie (4 1/2 stars))
“With the sweetest cast of characters and a rich history to fall madly in love with, I dare you to resist the allure of Hope Lake. Especially with charmers like Cooper, Nick, and Henry strutting their stuff all over town. Meet Me On Love Lane is the perfect follow up to On the Corner of Love and Hate, with all the same sweetness and tear-jerking true love you can expect from Nina Bocci.” (Hypable)
Praise for On the Corner of Love and Hate
"Romance at its finest with a colorful cast of characters and a couple to root for.” (New York Times bestselling author Sylvain Reynard )
“I flew through On the Corner of Love and Hate. Written with wit, quick banter, and heartfelt moments, I wished and rooted for Emma and Cooper’s happily-ever-after, for that opposites-attract heat to smolder and catch fire. And Nina Bocci delivered!” (Tif Marcelo, author of The Key to Happily Ever After )
"Emma’s everywoman appeal lends charm to the story, and her self-deprecating humor is a plus. This is a fun bit of fluffy entertainment." (Publishers Weekly)
"A delightful slow-burning romance that I adored!" (New York Times bestselling author Mia Sheridan )
“Impossible to read without smiling. On the Corner of Love and Hate is romantic fiction at its finest.” (Lauren Layne, USA Today bestselling author of Passion on Park Avenue )
"Bocci's warm, romantic novel deals with love, friendship and family ties. This page turner is filled with quick, witty banter from likable characters living in a realistic small town. The character-driven novel will have readers rooting for the confused friends. Fans of Jill Shalvis will thoroughly enjoy this swoon-worthy story.” (Booklist)
"Fans of enemies-to-lovers rom-coms (such as Sally Thorne’s The Hating Game) will enjoy, as will political junkies."
(Library Journal)
"Fans of Hallmark Channel rom-coms will flip over this sassy love story... What follows is a rediscovered spark, steamy banter and the art of finding love in unlikely places." (Woman's World)
"If you are on the hunt for a good small town romance with plenty of wit and feisty characters, you definitely want to pick up On the Corner of Love and Hate... because it’s everything you’re looking for… and probably a little bit more.” (Hypable (4 stars))
“Charming… Bocci puts her characters through an emotional wringer, but balances the pining and misunderstandings with humor and an overall uplifting message about community involvement, family and hope. Readers looking for a feel-good romance set in a diverse, quirky small town will be entranced by On the Corner of Love and Hate.” (Shelf Awareness)
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
We ran across town, holding hands and laughing as we darted through yards. The warm summer night was sticky, the humidity heavy on our skin. Neighbors shouted over the crickets and the owls, yelling for us to get home. It was well past dinnertime, but we’d made each other a promise that we wouldn’t stop until it was safe. What exactly safe meant was another story.
We didn’t exactly have a plan. Who does when you’re ten and running away from home? The idea had formed after we’d read From the Mixed-up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler together at the library. We had packed the essentials, just like Claudia and Jamie from the book: clean underwear, our life savings of eighteen dollars and forty-seven cents, a change of clothes, and pajamas.
“I brought some LEGOs in case we get bored,” I told him, holding up a plastic bag filled with a few dozen random pieces.
The tips of his ears turned bright pink. “I brought, uh, some books. You know, in case of boredom.” He opened his backpack to reveal a small library inside.
“Some?” I teased, zipping it back up for him. “Come on, we’ve got to get moving.”
The streetlights flickered on one by one, almost as if they were following us, lighting the way for our families, who were by now surely trying to find us.
“Do you think Emma is mad we ducked out on her party? She hadn’t gotten to the presents yet, and you know how much she loves opening them with an audience,” he asked, rubbing the back of his neck nervously.
We’d skipped out on our friend Emma’s birthday party just after the cake had been served. It was the height of excitement, and no one except the birthday girl herself knew that we had scooted out the back door. But that was at least thirty minutes ago, and our dads would be at Emma’s to pick us up by now.
“I told her what we were doing. She was going to try to keep them distracted to give us more of a head start,” I explained.
“Was she mad?” he asked, wondering if our mutual best friend was upset that we were running away.
“Worried, I think. You know Emma.”
He nodded in agreement. Our friend was always looking out for us.
“I promised that we’d write to let her know once we arrived safely at your aunt’s house. Are you sure your aunt won’t tell your mom where we’re going?”
He nodded. “She hasn’t talked to my mom in years. They’re mad at each other for something.”
Adults!
Dogs barked, nipping at our heels as we climbed the fence that spilled into the small backyard behind my grandmother’s office.
She wouldn’t come out and yell. Not at us.
Glancing behind me to the large brick building that sat in the fading darkness, I saw her cheering me on from the back window. I couldn’t hear what she was saying, but I had a feeling what it was.
Run. Or maybe: I love you. At the moment, they both meant the same thing.
If this had been any other day, she might have stopped me, talked some sense into me, as all grandmothers enjoyed doing. Maybe she—Dr. Bishop to everyone else, but Gigi to me and my friends—would have suggested that I stay with her as an alternative, either tucked away safely in her big sprawling house or even hidden away inside the doctor’s office where my dad was staying during the divorce. Anything instead of leaving me to listen to my parents’ constant fighting.
But not today. I think she hoped we would get away with our plan, given the circumstances. Not many people urged two ten-year-olds to run away, but Gigi suggested it without actually saying it. Better than anyone, she understood why I was desperate to leave.
I needed to leave, so that I could stay.
We scaled the last fence, leaving the majority of the small town behind. All that was beyond that was the railroad tracks and the woods.
Freedom.
But as I jumped down from the fence, a strangled cry spilled from my lips. With a thud, he hit the ground beside me, but just far enough away from the prickly branches that grew behind the fence.
The ones that I had landed right on top of.
“That looks really bad, Charlotte,” he said worriedly, glancing down at the two long gashes that had appeared on my leg. Bits of spiky branches poked out from the wound in my pale skin.
“It’s okay. I’ll be fine,” I bit out, wincing when I tried to stand. “We have to keep going.” I wiped a muddy hand through the blood that slid down my leg.
“Maybe Gigi should look at it? Clean it up?” he asked, glancing down at the blood squeamishly. “She’s right there. I just saw her looking through the window when we cut through the yard behind her office.” He looked from my leg to the direction of the building over the fence behind us.
“No, they’ll look for us there,” I explained, trying to blink back the tears that welled up.
We both turned to look behind us. We’d heard the loud voices at the same time.
“If you’re sure.”
“I am. Promise.”
He nodded. “I can tie a tourniquet,” he offered, looking surprisingly steady as he examined my leg. “It’s how I got my first-aid merit badge,” he said proudly.
“Always a Boy Scout.” I smiled, but it faded quickly when we saw the telltale sign of a flashlight beam signaling above the fence.
Waving him off, I felt guilty not letting him show me his skills, but we didn’t have time. I rolled back my shoulders, wincing again through the shooting pain. “I’ll take care of it once we get to the river,” I said, limping away.
The sound of voices was getting louder. Shouts from our parents, concerned neighbors, and the—
We both looked back at the fence worriedly at the sound of the police siren.
“How did they get Birdy here already?” I asked, hearing the static from the walkie-talkie.
“Your dad probably called him as soon as he found the note you left. Between him and my parents, there’s no way that they wouldn’t get Birdy, if not all the police, involved.”
I felt defeated, wishing I hadn’t left the note stuck with a magnet on my dad’s refrigerator. “I hoped we would have had more of a head start,” I explained, trying to keep the weight off my injured leg.
Seeing my struggle, he frowned. “Here, hop on,” he offered quickly, turning so his back was to me.
I looked at him, then down at me. I had a couple of inches and at least ten pounds on him. “I’m so much bigger than you! You can’t carry me!” I said, just as another shooting pain radiated through my leg.
“I can do it. Trust me, Charlotte,” he insisted. “We have to hurry.”
His sky-blue eyes shone with kindness and compassion, the sentiment that I knew in my heart was honest and real. That’s what best friends did—they helped when you needed it. And this might be our only chance of getting out of Hope Lake.
I hopped on, wrapping my arms around him. “Are you okay?”
In response, he gently squeezed my legs and took off as fast as he could toward the river, the chorus of voices fading behind us.
When we finally made it to the train tracks, he helped me slide down to sit on one of the large rocks that lay between the tracks and the river.
Our tracks. Our parents and the others searching for us wouldn’t know to look for us here. It was our secret spot. Sure, it was an odd place for a couple of kids to run away to, but in a small town you’re limited to where you can disappear.
That was the first lesson I remembered clearly from my decade in Hope Lake: you can’t keep many secrets; everyone knows everyone’s business.
We would escape here when my parents fought. Or if he was getting picked on at school. Anytime we needed a friend, we knew to head here. Because that’s what best friends did.
“Are you okay?” I asked, swiping the hem of my shirt across his sweaty forehead. He was breathing heavily and collapsed beside the rock I was sitting on.
He nodded, his dark hair slicked with sweat. “I can’t believe how hot it is,” he said, still panting.
It was unseasonably warm for the end of September. “It feels more like the middle of summer,” I groaned, wiping the sweat from my forehead.
School had barely started, which brought up another sad realization. “I won’t be here this winter.” I felt the tears well up. “No snow tubing or sledding through the woods. I won’t even get to be in the Christmas pageant this year.”
“That sucks. It’s our year to be Charlie Brown and Lucy,” he said, reminding me of the parts that we should be performing in this year’s play, A Charlie Brown Christmas.
“Your mom can’t just let you stay until June when school’s done?” he asked hopefully.
I shook my head. “She said her new job in New York starts next week. We have to get settled, so that’s why we’re leaving tomorrow.”
He hung his head, keeping his eyes down. “And she won’t let you stay with your dad?”
“He won’t be here. He’s going on a mission trip to Ghana for the next four months.” I couldn’t keep the tears from plopping onto my hands. “And before you ask, there’s no way she’ll let me stay with Gigi. I already asked. So did Gigi. It’s hopeless.”
“What about Emma? The Peronis would let you stay with them. They’d love it. Or, me. You can come stay with us!”
The hopefulness in his tone was heartbreaking. We had been best friends for as long as either of us could remember, walking into kindergarten holding hands and being virtually inseparable ever since.
He sighed, long and hard. “We should have brought food and water.” He rubbed his stomach. I heard it growl when he leaned over to check on my leg.
Blowing out a shaky breath, he looked up, worried. “You’ve got to clean this, Charlotte. It’s going to get infected. I knew we should have stopped at Gigi’s,” he mumbled.
I dug around in my pack for napkins or tissues but came up empty. Sliding off the rock, I hobbled over to the river to splash water on my leg. “It burns.” I watched the diluted blood slide down and color my white socks pink. “I don’t know if it’s supposed to sting like this.”
When I looked up, he was beside me, handing me a shirt from his backpack. “Use this.” His face was pulled tight, expressionless.
“No way,” I said, pushing the Transformers shirt back to him. “That’s your favorite.”
He shrugged, tipping his head back toward the rock I was on.
“It’s what best friends do.” With the shirt balled up in his hand, he bent down and soaked it in the river. Then, with careful hands, he blotted the white shirt against the cuts on my leg, careful not to rub too hard.
“I’m sorry,” he said with a sympathetic voice when I winced from the sting. I couldn’t imagine how sad he was using that shirt. He’d saved his own money to buy it from the mall in Barreton.
Now it was streaked with blood and dirt because of me.
It’s what best friends do. There was a sticker on the pole beside my makeshift seat that read BEST FRIENDS. We had put it there last year when we had coincidentally taken off from another birthday party. That time, it was mine. “I remember that,” I said, pointing up to it. Seeing the sticker brought back the drama my mother had caused at my tenth birthday party.
My father and Gigi had planned all of it: the invites, the food, securing the location and getting a copy of the movie The Goonies for all of us to enjoy. My mother’s only job was to get me a cake. It should have been simple, but she arrived late and forgot to pick it up. When she ran to the bakery to get it, she insisted someone else had bought it—with my name on it—which was unlikely.
My father drove me to Gigi’s with my presents, but the embarrassment was thick and heavy around me and I couldn’t enjoy anything. When we pulled up to her house, my friend was already there waiting. As if he knew that I would be upset and need to escape. We took off for our spot until the sounds of crickets told us it was time to go home.
This time, we were ignoring the crickets. We didn’t have a home for me to go back to.
I smiled up at the sticker, trying to shake off the overbearing sadness creeping in. The sticker looked as though it was brand-new. “I wonder if that sticker will look that good when I come back to visit.”
We both knew that running away wouldn’t work and that we would have to face the inevitable. But it was still worth a shot.
“Of course it will. You’ll be here next weekend,” he said, with his usual hopeful tone. “Your mom promised.”
“Of course,” I lied, hoping to spare him the pain that I was feeling. I didn’t know when I’d be back, but I was determined that it would be soon. I took out the Polaroid camera that was a gift from last year’s doomed party and snapped two pictures. One for each of us.
“What’s this for?”
“To help us remember the good times.” Even though I was leaving, I’d have people back here as an anchor.
We looked at each other as best we could under the darkening sky. “This place won’t be the same without you, Charlotte,” he said, taking my hand in his.
My belly erupted in flutters. My usual defense mechanism was humor, so I went that route, tamping down the nervous energy that I started to get when he looked at me. “Quite literally.” I laughed, pointing over his shoulder.
“They will be building houses over there soon,” he said, nodding his head toward a sign that was stuck in the wet ground. It read FUTURE SITE OF THE LOVE LANE COMMUNITY. The sign sat on the edge of a steep embankment that would be the location of a new housing development. All the houses would look over the rest of the town below, and a massive yellow dump truck was already parked there for when construction started.
“It’s a silly name, isn’t it?” I scoffed. “Love Lane.”
He shrugged. “I don’t know. I guess it’s nice, you know, if you like someone.”
My eyes swung to him, wide and curious. “What are you saying?”
“Nothing, nothing. I’m just saying it’s not that bad,” he mumbled, kicking the dirt. “It’s sad that people are going to be so close to this spot, though. It won’t be a secret anymore.” He looked up, and my heart plummeted when I saw the tears in his eyes. “This was supposed to be just for us.”
I nodded, holding back my own tears. “My dad said they’re not building up this far, but it’s only a matter of time before someone does,” I said, patting him on the knee.
“I’m going to miss this place.” I stared up at the chipped white railroad-crossing sign, my hand resting on the BEST FRIENDS sticker.
“Aren’t you going to miss anything else?” he asked, sitting beside me and stretching his legs out. Side by side the size difference between us was comical. His legs were bony, pale, and shorter than mine. My father said I’d had a growth spurt and that eventually he would have one, too, but there was also the chance that he was going to be slight in stature like his mom and not built broadly like his father, who was practically a giant.
It wasn’t just our height, though, that made us appear so different in age. He still looked like a little boy, whereas I—much to my dad’s dismay—was moving solidly toward preteenville. Doctor or not, my dad was jarred by the fact that his baby girl needed a training bra. My hair was growing faster, becoming more wayward with its curls, and my skin was starting to get the telltale signs that acne was going to be starting soon. Hormones were awful.
The only real similarity between us was the road map of scars, scabs, and black-and-blue marks that marred both of our limbs. It was thanks to hours of horseplay outside with friends. Friends I wouldn’t see every day anymore.
“Charlotte?” he said, bumping my leg with his.
“Oh, sorry, I was thinking. What did you ask?”
He sighed. “I asked if you were going to miss anything else.”
I smiled sadly. “I’ll miss my dad most of all. Three hours is a long way away to visit me, and he’s already so busy.”
“Are you going to miss anybody else? Teachers, classmates …” He paused, shrugging his shoulder. “Friends?” In hindsight, I should have realized what he was referring to.
Friends.
Him.
“I’m afraid.”
“Of leaving? New York is so cool! And you’re going to be so close to the city. Just a train ride away! We went with Cooper and his parents. There are shows on Broadway that you’ll love and the park has a zoo!”
I smiled weakly. “I know that. Dad mentioned it when he was trying to cheer me up.”
I sniffed, wiping my tears away with my shirt. “I’m worried everyone’s going to forget about me.”
A lump in my throat prevented me from continuing.
Taking my hand, he held it gently between his. “I’ll remember you, Charlotte.”
“I think I see them!” someone shouted from behind us.
He looked at me; the look of sadness and heartbreak that must have mirrored my own was written over his face. We lunged at each other at the same time, and I held him in the tightest hug I could muster up.
My tears plopped onto his shoulder, and I felt a wall, brick by brick, form around my heart. Protecting it from the hurt that I was feeling. This wasn’t a pain I ever wanted to feel again. I wouldn’t allow it.
What I didn’t realize was that by shutting out the pain of leaving him, I pushed him away completely. And I wouldn’t know what I was missing until I returned to Hope Lake.
Product details
- ASIN : B07P5GQXXP
- Publisher : Gallery Books
- Accessibility : Learn more
- Publication date : December 10, 2019
- Language : English
- File size : 4.9 MB
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 289 pages
- ISBN-13 : 978-1982102067
- Page Flip : Enabled
- Book 2 of 3 : Hopeless Romantics
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,068,550 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #6,321 in Small Town & Rural Fiction (Books)
- #16,920 in Contemporary Women's Fiction
- #19,060 in Contemporary Women Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Nina Bocci is a USA Today Bestselling novelist, publicist, eternal optimist, unabashed lipgloss enthusiast, constant apologist and a hopeless romanticist. She has too many college degrees that she’s not using and a Lego addiction that she blames on her son.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find this book to be a quick, heartwarming read with beautifully written characters. The story features a cute little floral shop setting, and one customer mentions it evokes Star Hollow vibes.
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Customers find the book easy to read, describing it as a quick heart happy read, with one customer particularly appreciating its fast pace of action.
"...Great characters that kept me enthralled and wanting to read 'just one more page'...Nina has def captured my heart with her sweet writing and..." Read more
"...A Sweet, quick heart happy read!" Read more
"...A must read!" Read more
"Meet Me on Love Lane is a delightful book about a young woman who returns home after being gone for 20 years...." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing style of the book, describing it as beautifully written with love, featuring a cute little floral shop setting.
"...Charlotte's journey of rediscovery and love is both sweet and uplifting, with just the right amount of humor to keep you smiling...." Read more
"...'just one more page'...Nina has def captured my heart with her sweet writing and romantic heart...." Read more
"...I'm all for small town romances. Then add in a cute little floral shop plus childhood best friends romance and this hopeless romantic is a..." Read more
"...from childhood to finding each other again as adults is beautifully written with love and humor...." Read more
Customers enjoy the characters in the book.
"...Great characters that kept me enthralled and wanting to read 'just one more page'...Nina has def captured my heart with her sweet writing and..." Read more
"...All of the characters are so well developed you feel a part of the Hope Lake friend group. A must read!" Read more
"...Charlotte was a fun character to read about as she comes to terms with life, love, memories, and home...." Read more
"...What a sweet sorry of love and friendship and homecoming. I loved all of the characters and the setting of Hope Lake made me want to move to a small..." Read more
Customers find the book heartwarming, with one mentioning it has Star Hollow vibes, while another describes it as a sweet story of love and friendship.
"...Charlotte's journey of rediscovery and love is both sweet and uplifting, with just the right amount of humor to keep you smiling...." Read more
"...page'...Nina has def captured my heart with her sweet writing and romantic heart...." Read more
"...It was very heartwarming! The romance was a slower burn but it was so darn precious. Everytime they were together I got butterflies for them!!..." Read more
"Couldn’t put it down! What a sweet sorry of love and friendship and homecoming...." Read more
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Great second chance romance
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on November 18, 2024The perfect small-town romance to cozy up with on a fall day! From the moment you step into Hope Lake, you'll fall head over heels for its charming residents. Charlotte's journey of rediscovery and love is both sweet and uplifting, with just the right amount of humor to keep you smiling. (I need Gigi as my grandma STAT) I don’t know about y’all but hot English teacher who also happens to be a childhood best friend or hot doctor is a good problem to have. If you're in the mood for a delightful read that feels like a warm hug, this book is your next must-read!
- Reviewed in the United States on December 10, 2019Eekk Henry & Charlotte are too cute for words.
This story got me in the feels real bad...Henry...just sighhhhhhhh sooooo hard for his poor little heart.
Fate pushed these two together again, but it was up to each of them to fight for their second chance. This story was very heartwarming and it def pulled at the old heart strings. It was sweet and romantic and all the things a small town, second chance romance should be. Great characters that kept me enthralled and wanting to read 'just one more page'...Nina has def captured my heart with her sweet writing and romantic heart. Do yourself a favor and grab this book as well as book 1 in this Hopeless Romantics series.
#HopeLake #Ruckusy #LateBloomers #LoveLane #Memories #Gigi
- Reviewed in the United States on December 19, 2019Well this was adorable! The town gave me major Star Hollow vibes and actually reminded me of the town I live in which I loved! I'm all for small town romances. Then add in a cute little floral shop plus childhood best friends romance and this hopeless romantic is a goner!
It was definitely a little predictable and started off slowish but I still enjoyed it. It was very heartwarming! The romance was a slower burn but it was so darn precious. Everytime they were together I got butterflies for them!! I will say the cover makes this seem like it's set in the Fall when really it's based in the Summer but it was still so fun! A Sweet, quick heart happy read!
- Reviewed in the United States on March 16, 2020After a traumatic divorce, Charlotte is forced to move away from the small town of Hope Lake, as well as all her friends and family. After a blow-up in New York, Charlotte escapes back to her childhood home, 21 years later. However, childhood trauma and manipulation was made her forget all the great things about her home town. As the story progresses, her memories slowly come back, and starts to think that maybe she could make a life in Hope Lake, but she’s not moving back. This is just temporary, right?
This was really sweet. I love friends to lovers romances and this was just perfect. I LOVED the Henry, Charlotte’s childhood best friend. He was just the sweetest and loveliest book nerd who was just looking to settle down. Charlotte’s grandmother was another favorite character; she was the favorite of the town and constantly had people doting and spoiler her with so much love.
My one issue with this book was the writing—the characters felt a good eight or ten years younger than the age they’re supposed to be. Charlotte and her friends were supposed to be 31, but felt more like 22 or 23. I had to constantly remind myself that they were older than they seem.
Although this is the sequel to On the Corner of Love and Hate, it’s more of a companion piece and you do not need to read it before reading this book.
This a perfect and swoony romance that was heartfelt and a fun read.
ARC was provided by the publisher via Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 15, 2019Following Charlotte and Henry’s journey from childhood to finding each other again as adults is beautifully written with love and humor. Thank you Nina for a fabulous follow up to “On the Corner of Love and Hate.” All of the characters are so well developed you feel a part of the Hope Lake friend group. A must read!
- Reviewed in the United States on December 14, 2019Meet Me on Love Lane is a delightful book about a young woman who returns home after being gone for 20 years. Charlotte was a fun character to read about as she comes to terms with life, love, memories, and home. I look forward to reading more books in this series!
- Reviewed in the United States on December 24, 2019Couldn’t put it down!
What a sweet sorry of love and friendship and homecoming. I loved all of the characters and the setting of Hope Lake made me want to move to a small town.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 5, 2021Two very different people meet and fall in love. Loved the fast pace of action, description of the small town atmosphere, and the artistic flower shop and its projects.