new release, Review

✍🏻 Professor Romance’s Reviews: Louise Bay’s Love Fast, book 1 of the Colorado Club Billionaires series ✍🏻

Overall Grade: B

Tropes: runaway bride; small town romance; workplace romance; billionaire MMC; he falls first

Louise Bay’s Love Fast serves as the inaugural novel in her Colorado Club Billionaires series, establishing a narrative foundation that connects to her previous New York City Billionaires collection. This crossover approach allows Bay to introduce readers to Byron, a character previously mentioned in The Hero + Vegas = No Regrets, while simultaneously constructing the framework for her new series.

Bay crafts a four star narrative that explores the relationship between Byron, a privileged billionaire, and Rosey, a woman from modest economic circumstances. The author effectively develops Byron’s backstory, creating a multidimensional character whose privileged existence is complicated by emotional trauma. This character development generates reader sympathy, establishing an emotional investment in his narrative trajectory.

The chemistry between Byron and Rosey manifests primarily through physical attraction, though Bay attempts to deepen their connection through parallel experiences of parental trauma. Both protagonists navigate complicated relationships with a parent, creating a psychological foundation for their mutual attraction beyond physical desire. This shared emotional wound becomes the central catalyst for their developing relationship.

Despite Rosey’s limited worldly experience and financial disadvantage, Bay positions her as instrumental in supporting Byron’s professional ambitions, particularly the development of his Colorado Club resort. Through this dynamic, Bay examines themes of power and privilege, interrogating how socioeconomic disparities influence intimate relationships. The author does not simply acknowledge these disparities but explores how they shape interpersonal dynamics and personal growth.

Beyond the central romance, Bay explores several compelling thematic elements. The narrative considers the nurturing potential of small town communities, illustrating how close knit social structures can support individual development. Additionally, the concept of chosen family emerges as a significant theme, particularly relevant for characters whose biological families prove dysfunctional or absent. Bay further examines how friendship networks can provide emotional sustenance in the absence of healthy parental relationships.

The primary weakness of Love Fast lies in its reliance on the instant attraction trope and the accelerated timeline of emotional development. The rapid progression from initial meeting to profound emotional connection within approximately one week strains credibility. The narrative structure follows a predictable trajectory: protagonists meet, discover physical proximity as neighbors, share innocent moments over hot chocolate, engage in physical intimacy, separate briefly, and reunite weeks later with declarations of love. This compressed emotional timeline limits the opportunity for readers to witness substantial relationship development, sacrificing emotional depth for narrative expedience.

While the instant attraction trope remains standard within the romance genre, its implementation here prioritizes physical connection over emotional evolution. The abbreviated timeline constrains the potential complexity of Byron and Rosey’s relationship, reducing what could be a nuanced exploration of class differences and emotional healing to a somewhat formulaic romantic progression.

Despite these limitations, Love Fast remains an engaging introduction to Bay’s new series. The author’s accessible prose style facilitates reader immersion, and her exploration of emotional trauma provides a counterbalance to the more conventional aspects of the narrative. The novel effectively establishes the world of the Colorado Club billionaires while maintaining connections to Bay’s existing literary universe.

For readers who appreciate romance narratives that combine elements of wealth fantasy with emotional healing, Love Fast offers a satisfying, if somewhat predictable, reading experience. Bay demonstrates particular skill in balancing moments of physical intimacy with instances of emotional vulnerability, creating a narrative that, despite its compressed timeline, delivers the emotional satisfaction characteristic of the contemporary romance genre.

The novel suggests significant potential for the Colorado Club billionaires series, establishing narrative threads and secondary characters that promise engaging future installments. While Love Fast might not transcend genre conventions, it skillfully fulfills reader expectations while laying groundwork for a potentially richer series narrative.

Love Fast represents a solid beginning to Bay’s new series, balancing familiar romance tropes with meaningful thematic exploration. Despite relying on an accelerated emotional timeline that limits character development depth, the novel successfully establishes both individual character arcs and broader series potential.

In love and romance,

Professor A

new release, Review

✍🏻 Professor Romance’s Review: Pippa Grant’s The Bride’s Runaway Billionaire, a Three BFFs and A Wedding Romance ✍🏻

Overall Grade: A

Tropes/Characteristics: runaway bride FMC; movie star MMC; close proximity; surprise baby; second chance; small town; found family; opposites attract

Throughout reading Pippa Grant’s The Bride’s Runaway Billionaire, I kept asking myself what is it about her romances that tug at me. At face value, Pippa Grant writes quirky rom-coms. The group of writers I put her in is Penny Reid and Lucy Score. They have a distinct writing voice and presence in their stories. Oftentimes, the face of the story is laden with quirky characters and inconceivable plot points. However, by the end of the romance, it’s clear this is a facade. Beneath cute animals such Yolko Ohno, the one-legged chicken, in Grant’s newest offering and the over-the-top antics of the supporting cast of characters abides a deep, loving relationship between her MMC and FMC. There is always something deep below the surface of Pippa Grant’s romances, and the marriage of the light facade with the depth of character rendering is why I always come back for more. 

Throughout Grant’s most recent series, Three BFFs and a Wedding, she’s crafted a small-town world where everyone knows everything and everyone else, and it feels tempestuous at times. In the first two books of the series, she has a big problem: how to handle the upended wedding between Emma and Chandler. Book 2, The Gossip and the Grump, is where she holds us in suspense about Emma’s situation, and she wallops us at the end of that book with a surprise. Crafting this series in this way sets up The Bride’s Runaway Billionaire to be the most anticipated story of the series, which has the potential to cause a problem: what happens if Book 3 doesn’t live up to the hype? Well, you need not fear because, for this reader, The Bride’s Runaway Billionaire is my favorite of the three. Grant definitely saved the best for last, and she fulfilled the promise of creating a series that ends with the cherry on top of the sundae. Why did I love it so much?

  1. Emma makes her MMC work for it. I love that. I’m not a fan of second-chance romances where the hurt FMC lets go of her pain too easily. It undermines the tension of the reconciliation, and Grant superbly takes her reader through the paces of the MMC’s groveling.
  2. What this does is make us fall deeply in love with her MMC. Here’s the thing: I am attempting to write this review without naming him. I know others will do it in their reviews; however, I won’t. Grab the book and find out for yourself. Just know that the inclusion of this MMC into this book is pure genius. It connects the Pippa Grant universe (which I’m a particular fan of doing – it shows me that an author has a distinct and intelligent plan for her stories, even if she figured it out at the last minute. Plus it allows us re-entry into a book world that we previously loved). Secondly, Grant has written this MMC to be everything we need him to be for Emma’s journey. He takes responsibility, he recognizes his shortcomings, there is no gas-lighting, and he accepts his reckoning, all while falling deeply, madly in love with a character who has suffered previously. This is the type of heroic characterization that makes a reader swoon. 
  3. The family of friends in this series is pure joy. The needling, the love, the respect – everything with this cast of friends adds another layer to The Bride’s Runaway Billionaire. The reflections and the reconciliations make for a feel-good read.

Almost a week out from reading Pippa Grant’s newest book, and it still swims in my mind. Emma and her MMC were a delight to read, and I’m so thankful that Pippa Grant knows who she is as a writer because her books bring so much light into a world that oftentimes feels dark. The Bride’s Runaway Billionaire is simply a must-read.

In love and romance,

Professor A