Summer at Little Beach Street Bakery

Jenny Colgan

Book - 2016

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Subjects
Published
New York, NY : William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2016]
Language
English
Main Author
Jenny Colgan (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"Recipes included"--Page 4 of cover.
Physical Description
xi, 384, 16 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780062371249
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Colgan's follow-up to Little Beach Street Bakery (2015) finds Polly living a simple but charmed life in little Mount Polbearne on the Cornish coast. She and Huckle are happily making a home in the old lighthouse. Grumpy Mrs. Manse has retired, leaving Polly to manage the bakeries as she pleases. Business is bustling, and Polly has been wholly claimed by this small-town community. But when Mrs. Manse suddenly dies, Polly's lovely life takes a sour turn. Mrs. Manse's sister sends her son, Malcolm, to oversee the bakeries. He cuts costs by ordering in cheap prepackaged breads and firing Polly. Huckle comes up with the idea of Polly baking out of a food truck, but then he has to temporarily return to his family's farm in the States, leaving Polly to weather storms both literal and figurative without him by her side. Readers who fell for the quirky townsfolk and their goings-on in Colgan's previous novel will be pleased by this equally sweet and funny sequel.--Walker, Aleksandra Copyright 2016 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Plucky Polly Waterford wants a simple life of baking treats at the Little Beach Street Bakery and cozying up her home, a run-down lighthouse she shares with a beekeeper boyfriend and pet puffin. Colgan (Little Beach Street Bakery, 2015, etc.) offers her latest literary confection, the tale of Polly, whose plan to buy the quaint Little Beach Street Bakery is derailed when its current owner dies. This leaves room for greedy, meddling heirs who put profits above pastries, forcing Polly to grapple with how to maintain both her job and her integrity. She never has to make that choice, though, as she's fired after showing up for work covered in puffin vomit. (Shockingly, the new boss isn't a fan of Polly's puffin, who regularly visits the bakery.) With the help of her hunky beau, Polly ventures out on her own with a mobile bakery. Reading more like a romantic-comedy movie script than a novel, this formulaic tale has all the requisite elements of a boppy chick flick. There's the forced merriment of the pub scene where a cast of tipsy friends laughs at their own sloshy jokes. There's the daffy part when Polly bargains with the bumbling owner of "Nan the Van." (She offers more money than he wantscrazy, right?) And there's that time when Polly and her ex-boyfriend's widow dance together while baking. While there's no shortage of quirkiness, the missing ingredient in this novel is plot. Polly simply goes through her paces and gives readers little reason to turn pages and root for her. Colgan has a wide fan base who find her light novels as warm and delicious as the sweets in her books. Her latest, though, is half-baked. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.