What a perfectly light-hearted Christmas romance! Charlotte is a former child actress and there's no escaping the one film she starred in: Christmas, Truly, a Love Actually-type holiday movie. Therefore she's not pleased when she winds up on a family excursion to the home where the movie was filmed. But that's where she meets Graham, whose famous ancestor owned the home and who is trying to figure out a way to keep it going.
Charlotte and Graham have great banter. I loved watching their relationship develop, first for professional reasons and then for something more. While they both have gone through difficult things, particularly Graham losing his father, they're not dwelt on for long. But there's still good emotional heartstrings—it made me tear up. Just a delightful reading experience through and through. I have a feeling I'll be revisiting at the holidays for years to come.
Note: I DNFed the author's historical romance debut and haven't read anything else by her. I figured it would stay that way but a friend loved this book so much, she gifted me a copy. I'm so glad she did. If Waters writes more contemporary romance going forward, I'll be reading it.
Characters: Charlotte is a 29 year old white American illustrator and former child actress. Graham is a 33 year old white British accountant and vegetarian who wears glasses. This is set in London and Upper Larkspur, England.
Content notes: emotional neglect by FMC's parents, toxic parents, financial stress, FMC's parents have a tempestuous relationship (multiple affairs and separations but they never divorce), discussion of artist whose wife and mistress lived in the same house and who didn't acknowledge his children born out of wedlock, past death of MMC's father (cancer), baby vomit, on page sex, alcohol, inebriation, excessive drinking, hangover, marijuana (secondary character), ageist jokes, gendered pejoratives, ableist language