Status
Series
Description
"Life is sweet for Issy Randall, owner of the Cupcake Cafe. Taught how to bake by her beloved late grandfather, she is proudly carrying on the family tradition with her London eatery. Not only is business thriving, the icing on the cupcake is that she also happens to be head over heels in love. Plus she's surrounded and supported by close friends, even if her cupcake colleagues Pearl and Caroline don't seem quite as upbeat about the upcoming season of snow and merriment. But when her boyfriend Austin is scouted for a possible move to New York, Issy is forced to contemplate the prospect of a long-distance romance. And when the Christmas rush at the cafe--with its increased demand for her delectable creations--begins to take its toll, Issy has to decide what she holds most dear"--… (more)
User reviews
This time, Austin finds himself in New York, being headhunted for a new job. Issy has a
This book is a lovely read, just right for the time of year. I'm really enjoying Jenny Colgan's 'foodie' books and I think she gets them just right.
When Austin is offered a job at a
I really enjoyed this festive book. To me, Christmas at the Cupcake Cafe, is a Christmas pudding of a book......rich, dense and full of fruity flavour which burst in your mouth, flooding your taste buds with the flavours of Christmas. The characters are well-rounded and come to life. I enjoyed the scene where Pearl, one of Issy's employees is left to mind the fort at the Cupcake Cafe and train a new employee, Maya, who cant get the hang of the coffee machine, leaving unsatisfied customers waiting for their Java fix. Worse, Pearl explodes the mixer, which drips strawberry cake mix all over the walls and ceiling. I particularly liked the twist at the end where both Issy and Austin fly in opposite directions across the pond to be with each other. The book also includes tips and recipes and an excerpt from Jenny's new book, The Loveliest Chocolate shop in Paris.
This is the sequel to Colgan's highly successful Meet Me at the Cupcake Cafe, in which main character Issy loses her job, sets up the Cupcake Cafe, and finds
In this sequel, it is, as the name suggests, the run-up to Christmas, the Cafe is hugely successful and extremely busy. And Issy's wonderful bank manager boyfriend heads off to New York to be headhunted, so suddenly that he has no time to discuss it with the woman he lives with. So guess what - Issy is expected to choose between the business she has nourished and built up into a success, and the soppy, selfish idiot she is inexplicably in love with. So much for feminism.
I think you can see where I am heading here. Sometimes, when I want a little escapism, I love reading chick-lit. It generally doesn't tax the brain, can be entertaining and feel-good. But I still want the characters to be well-drawn, and likeable, and for the stories to be plausible. And for me, this book fails on every count.
It fails on the characters being well-drawn. Yes, this is a sequel, and maybe the characters had been drawn well in the previous book, but the author herself writes an introduction to this sequel that makes clear that the reader doesn't have to have read the first book to get on with this one. So the characters should be able to stand alone in this book, and they don't. We have Issy, who seems so scatty most of the time, you wonder how on earth she did actually build up a successful business. And Caroline, a two-dimensional, stereotypical past-her-sell-by-date trophy wife. Helena, another stereotype, this time of the wannabe yummy mummy variety. And good old stereotypical salt of the earth Pearl, who we are constantly reminded is poor, but without ever really being given any proper understanding of what that poverty means for her. And of course, the drippy boyfriend.
Then there's the plausibility. In what world is it likely that the manager of a small branch of a British bank would be headhunted for what sounds like investment banking in New York? And would a businesswoman really decide to leave her business in the hands of someone who had phoned her after she'd been away for two days because they couldn't cope? Actually, given how scatty Issy appears, she probably would. But as for that fairy-tale ending, I won't give any spoilers, but really - wholly implausible.
I have read a couple of delightful Christmas-themed chick-lit stories this year. This wasn't one of them.