BOOK REVIEW: Strictly Love by Julia Williams

Strictly_loveWe are all about the dancing on Trashionista at the moment, which is why I was so delighted to get my hands on Julia Williams' latest novel, Strictly Love. It is a story of marriage, romance, dentistry (oh yes) and of course, dancing.

The four main characters, Emily, Katie, Mark and Rob meet at Isabella's dance evenings. They each decide not to bring into the classes who they really are, but instead they escape real life for a while in a whirl of Ballroom and Latin.

Emily is a lawyer who works for a media law firm, defending z-listers from their illegal and tasteless shenanigans. She is frustrated as she thought she'd be doing something a little more worthwhile, but the pay at the firm is good, she has her mother's debts and a large mortgage to pay. Her friend is Katie, married to Charlie and trying to create a perfect home, marriage and family.

Then we have Mark, a dentist and all round lovely bloke. He is divorced with two children (although he doesn't tell this to the women he meets at dance class) and has a z-lister as a patient, who is about to make his life hell. Mark's friend and flat-mate is Rob. A bit of a womanizer, he is actually hiding a terrible trauma.

Throw them all together with their secrets and what do you get? A real page turner of a story that's what.

Although at the beginning I was really confused because of the amount of people I was introduced to (but that may just be my fuzzied brain at the moment) once I had got going I couldn't put it down. Julia tells a great story with enough predictability (you've got to have some) but also lots of twists and turns in order to keep me guessing, making sure I didn't finish the story in my head before I'd reached the end of the book. There was one particular bit of the plot which I did not guess, at all, which I always like.

If I had to nit pick, it would be about Emily and the legal plot between her and Mark about half way through the book. It wasn't really credible to me. But, that is nit picking and it didn't matter once I got my head around it, as this particular issue carried the rest of the book forward.

So, if you are a fan of dancing, (and even if you aren't) and missing Anton's presence in Strictly Come Dancing (I know I am) this book is great to curl up with as the nights draw in. Lovely.

Rating: 4/5

Like this? Try The Ballroom Class by Lucy Dillon

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