new release, Review

✍🏻 Professor Romance’s Reviews: Karla Sorensen’s Forever Starts Tonight, book 4 of her Wilder Family series ✍🏻

Overall Grade: A

Tropes: best friend’s sister; workplace romance; surprise baby; small town romance; one night to get over it; age gap

It’s a travesty if you haven’t read Karla Sorensen yet. It’s something that should be rectified as soon as possible. I’d love to tell you to drop everything and grab her most recent book, Forever Starts Tonight, but that’s a terrible place to begin. Instead, jump into the Wilder clan with The Plan and move into her Wilder series, landing on this most recent story. I will tell you right now that you will NOT put this series down once you begin. Sorensen has written a set of books that pick off parts of your soul little by little, replacing it with their decadent stories. After finishing Forever Starts Tonight, there are two main reasons why people should read Karla Sorensen.

  1. Her story pacing is impeccable—that’s a capital “I” impeccable. The two books before Forever Starts Tonight, Head Over Heels and Promise Me This, were two of the slowest burns I’ve read from her (especially Promise Me This—Ian made Sorensen’s readers work for their patience). As I read those former books, the pacing was precisely what was required to develop Sorensen’s character arcs. Setting up the issues of their pasts and helping them move past it even though their attraction and chemistry could potentially derail that work is where Sorensen’s superpower exists. This is also the case with Forever Starts Tonight. While this isn’t a slow burn like the previous books in the series, there is character work to be done, causing Jax and Poppy to work hard at finding their HEA. Every moment of this story is carefully drawn and quartered. The intentionality behind Sorensen’s progression is the heartbeat of Forever Starts Tonight, which compels her readers through the story. If you think this is indicative of this newest book, it is not. It is a cornerstone of Sorensen’s storytelling and why she has a rabid reader fanbase.
  2. Besides her story pacing, her ability to craft compelling characters is another strength. Sorensen writes emotionally messy characters, but not in a way that levels heaps of angst on her readers. Instead, she reminds us about the humanity of her characters and shows us a pathway through our challenges. In Forever Starts Tonight, I connected with Jax, her MMC, a man of few words but big hidden emotions. Jax has a long journey ahead of him from her Prologue. The difficult situation of his upbringing shades his present, and it takes the joy and intuitive nature of Poppy to unwind complex feelings. Sorensen makes her characters do the hard work of unraveling feelings and putting voice to them. She writes them in a way that makes them real and palpable for her readers. When Jax finally gets to a moment when he can accept himself for Poppy, their character development transitions away from uptight tension to a nuanced, impassioned love affair.  Through Sorensen’s writing, we become emotionally invested because we see ourselves in her characters’ struggles, which helps us recognize and/or resolve our own emotional issues. 

I introduced my elderly mom to Karla Sorensen over a year ago, and she has become one of her favorites. She recently devoured the Wilder Family series (the first two books), and she looked at me and said, “how does she write such amazing stories with such loveable characters?” I could only smile and say because I imagine Karla Sorensen knows life and people, and she makes us fall in love with both when she writes stories such as Forever Starts Tonight

Now, excuse me while I run to Amazon to purchase this story for my mom…she has some reading to do…just like you.

In love and romance,

Professor A

new release, Review

✍🏻 Professor Romance’s Reviews: Karla Sorensen’s Promise Me This ✍🏻

Overall Grade: A

Tropes: best friends to lovers; roommates; grump/sunshine; single mom; very slow burn

Karla Sorensen is a good picker. You might question my choice of words to grab your attention for this review. You may be thinking, “of what, her nose?” Maybe, maybe not. That’s a personal choice. I suggest that Sorensen’s capacity to make the best choices in her romances is the draw to them. Her ability to create realistic characters (save for the always handsome, well-built men) and the story arcs keep readers such as myself returning to her books with an almost rabid hunger. The Wilder Family or the Ward Family or the Washington Wolves Family aren’t interchangeable. Yes, they have her voice stamped into their books, but they are distinct. They tug at our experiences because they think and feel like us. They might be professional football players, but Sorensen humanizes them in a way that makes us believe we could be their friends. Over and over again, I find this trait in her writing, and it compels me to read every book she writes. 

With her newest book, Promise Me This, Sorensen has a challenge. I’ve heard in many a reader group that the “friends to lovers” trope can be a difficult sell. I’ve even heard authors state this explicitly as their least favorite trope. They struggle with finding the tipping point: what compels two people who have been friends for a long time to finally realize they are attracted to or in love with each other. I’ve read it numerous times, and I will say right here: Sorensen has written it well. When I tell you the why behind that, you’ll understand, but I have to imagine that she struggled to get this “right,” and her “choices” are the compelling reasons why she has done it well. 

  • It’s the time between the last time her characters saw each other and their present. The intentionality of keeping them apart for seventeen years, many of those years without contact, is important. In that time, Ian and Harlow maintain the character traits that make them beloved, but they mature into different people. Ian can still feel protective of Harlow in the present, but Harlow, as a single mother living in New York City, has also learned to care for herself. The present-day protectiveness becomes less a habit and more a gift, something to be attracted to versus a survival mechanism. The decidedness of Sorensen’s choice to keep them apart allows for her best friends to become attracted to each other and eventually become forever in a way that makes it believable. This is important to the success of this trope in Promise Me This.
  • It’s the slow burn. For readers of smut, this book, quite frankly, might not be for you. Promise Me This is a SERIOUS slow burn (80ish% in for the deed). I’m a personal fan of slow burn as I need the space for the attraction and chemistry to burn. And Sorensen does this well. It never felt manipulative or egregious; it felt necessary as Harlow and Ian MUST understand the change in their relationship and be ready to accept the consequences. Had she been haphazard in their physicality, it would have reduced their story, and their story holds so much power as it speaks to the capacity to love a person beyond the nostalgia of friendship. Sorensen took the space of her story to guide her characters into the truth about their love for each other; that it transcends friendship. The slow burn of Ian and Harlow is my favorite part of this story

Another compelling choice of Sorensen’s in this book is the magnification of relationships within time. The juxtaposition of Ian and Harlow’s long-time friendship and the familiarity of it against Harlow’s relationship with her parents and their routine of living is compelling. As Ian and Harlow try to find equilibrium as their feelings progress, and Harlow recognizes the rigidity of her parents’ routine and way of life, you can see the importance of embracing change. Without that realization, Harlow and Ian can never take the leap into loving each other as more than friends. Instead, if one can imagine it, their friendship might become as staid and comfortable as her parents’ way of life. This entire book underscores the necessity of remaining flexible and open, to allow something bigger and better, and to be both retrospective and introspective in the present. 

And finally, Harlow’s daughter, Sage, along with the Wilder family, continues to remind us of the love of family to support us during the best and most difficult of times. As I entered Promise Me This, I grieved the loss of Tim. His heart-to-heart talks with his children and their love interests have been some of my favorite moments of this series. However, Tim is not lost in Promise Me This. He is stamped into the hearts and minds of his children, so we continue to receive Tim Wilder-isms throughout the book. Even more, Sorensen gifts us with Sage-isms and Sheila-isms throughout her romance. Sorensen’s “choice” to write a family as foundational as the Wilders tethers this series. 

Karla Sorensen simply knows how to choose words, phrases, sentences, characters, and plot lines/devices, creating stories that don’t let go of your heart. I will say it right here: Promise Me This is my favorite book of the series. That’s a difficult choice, but 65 highlights of prose later and a heart so full of Harlow, Ian, and Sage tells the truth. This book absolutely stole my heart. And the extended epilogue is pure emotional perfection.

In love and romance,

Professor A

Cover Reveal

✍🏻 I am in LOVE with the cover for Karla Sorensen’s Promise Me This, Ian Wilder’s story. This couple is GORGEOUS!!! ✍🏻

PROMISE ME THIS

Karla Sorensen

Release Date: May 9

WILL BE AVAILABLE IN KINDLE UNLIMITED

Imagine this: an author with a raging case of writer’s block finds an unexpected source of inspiration in her grumpy, gorgeous new roommate. Sounds amazing, right? Except that new roommate is my childhood best friend. And Ian Wilder has been off-limits since I was five.

It’s been over a decade since I’ve seen him, but when I return to my hometown after years away, Ian’s exactly the man I remembered. The same guy who gave me his coat on a playground when we were kids and promised he’d take care of me forever. I need a quiet place to work with this deadline looming. I need a place where my daughter can unwind. Enter Ian with an offer I can’t refuse: his spare bedroom.

It’s an easy yes. Except now the problem is I can’t stop thinking about him, and these thoughts? They’re wandering out of the friend zone. I keep imagining very creative ways to rip off his clothes. And Ian starts giving me looks of his own, the kind that make my heart race.

One night, we cross a line we can’t uncross. The lines have blurred, and our friendship is hanging by a thread.

Imagine this: a woman falling for her best friend. And she has no idea if he feels the same.

Pre-Order Link:

https://amzn.to/3PtoAcj

Meet Karla Sorensen:

 Karla Sorensen is an Amazon top 20 bestselling author who refuses to read or write anything without a happily ever after. When she’s not devouring historical romance or avoiding the laundry, you can find her watching football (British AND American), HGTV or listening to Enneagram podcasts so she can psychoanalyze everyone in her life, in no particular order of importance. With a degree in Advertising and Public Relations from Grand Valley State University, she made her living in senior healthcare prior to writing full-time. Karla lives in Michigan with her husband, two boys and a big, shaggy rescue dog named Bear.

Keep up with Karla Sorensen and subscribe to her newsletter: http://www.karlasorensen.com/newsletter

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