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Average rating4
In the tradition of Good in Bed and The Assistants comes a funny and smart comedy about a young matchmaker balancing her messy personal life and the demands of her eccentric clients. Sasha Goldberg has a lot going for her: a recent journalism degree from NYU, an apartment with her best friend Caroline, and a relationship that would be amazing if her finance-bro boyfriend Jonathan would ever look up from his BlackBerry. But when her dream career falls through, she uses her family's darkest secret to land a job as a matchmaker for New York City's elite at the dating service Bliss. Despite her inexperience, Sasha throws herself into her new career, trolling for catches on Tinder, coaching her clients through rejection, and dishing out dating advice to people twice her age. She sets up a TV exec who wanted kids five years ago, a forty-year-old baseball-loving virgin, and a consultant with a rigorous five-page checklist for her ideal match. Sasha hopes to find her clients The One, like she did. But when Jonathan betrays her, she spirals out of control--and right into the arms of a writer with a charming Southern drawl, who she had previously set up with one of her clients. He's strictly off-limits, but with her relationship on the rocks, all bets are off. Fresh, sweet, and laugh-out-loud funny, Playing with Matches is the addictive story about dating in today's swipe-heavy society, and a young woman trying to find her own place in the world.
Reviews with the most likes.
3.5 stars. The perfect summer book to read outdoors with a glass of wine (though I read this in bed at night with my PJs on, sans wine). It's light, at times inducing an eyeball, but a nice escape. I loved all the attention to what life in New York is like, and while the two main male characters drove me nuts with their decisions, it turned out quite well. Just a heads up - this is not a romance novel.
Reshelved. This is definitely more coming of age post-college rather than romance. I loved it. I only wish there was more scenes with Caroline. I missed her after a while and this book was rather short so those could've easily been added.