ABOUT THE BOOK
Whitney Garrett is preparing to enter culinary school in the spring, but first she has to sell enough homemade pies at the local Christmas markets to pay her tuition. When her oven breaks, Whitney asks Marie Sloan, proprietor of the Red Door Inn, if she can use the inn's kitchen to keep up with her orders. Marie agrees, with a catch: Whitney has to watch the three Sloan children and cook breakfasts for the Red Door in return.

The inn is busy with holiday guests--including Aretha Franklin Sloan's perpetually single nephew Daniel and Ruby, a businesswoman in town to purchase Aretha's antiques store. Intent on making a Christmas match for the two, Aretha enlists Whitney's help in her schemes. But the deeper Whitney gets, the more she realizes that Ruby is definitely not the right woman for Daniel--and the more she thinks that she just might be his perfect match.


REVIEW
The misunderstanding that leads us into the ending of the book and has us wondering if the two main characters will end up together is something that simple communication—which would only be reasonable at that point in their relationship—would have fixed. Seems completely out of character for them. Also, it didn’t seem like a misunderstanding, more like something that was strange but certainly nothing that should have caused anger or the issue it did in this story. While it was a cute story, the ending really ruined it for me. I haven’t read any of her other books in this series but I enjoyed one of her other series—Prince Edward Island Shores.

*I received a complimentary copy of this book. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.

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