Bittersweet by Melanie La’Brooy
Reviewed by Helen Simons
Sabrina Falks is the golden girl: a beautiful, successful actress who is engaged to the too-good-to-be-true Edward. Her life is glamorous and seemingly perfect – apart from her recurring desire to run away.
Her younger sister, Mimi, is funny and bright but hopelessly lost, with no career prospects, no money, no love life and a string of disastrous mistakes in her past.
Estranged since a fight over their dark family history, Sabrina and Mimi enter into a reluctant alliance when Sabrina hires Mimi to be her bridesmaid. The sisters then do battle with the intrusive paparazzi, out-of-control dress designers, and, increasingly, each other.
As the wedding day approaches, long-buried family secrets emerge, and Sabrina and Mimi find themselves facing some unforeseen home truths.
Marriage, celebrity culture and the bittersweet bonds of family take centre stage in this warm, funny novel that sparkles with wit and wisdom.
OK, I have to be honest here and say that my first impression of this book wasn’t good. It looked and sounded like a pretentious novel about how grand life is when you are wealthy and good looking, that it would be too ‘high brow chick-lit’ for my tastes. I started it and thought I would really struggle with it due to my first impression. But, I LOVED IT!! I found that the focus wasn’t really on Sabrina’s success’s and Mimi’s failures, but more on the difficulties that being family can have on relationship’s and prejudges.
Top Comments
This was the first La'Brooy book I read, I've since read all but Serendipity and would have to say that Bittersweet is by far my favourite. I didn't like The Wish List much at all, but did really enjoy Lovestruck.
I took this book on holidays with me under the misconception that I'd be laughing out loud yet again with the fabulous slapstick of Melanie La'Brooy. I found it very readable but was disappointed that (a) it wasn't funny and (b) that the serious issues were not explored with any real depth (which, given that I was on holidays, was maybe not a bad thing). I also found it confusing knowing whose perspective the narrator was following - it could bounce from sister to sister to aunt in one paragraph. I much prefer Melanie's humour-riddled books and maybe shouldn't have assumed this would be the same.