

A Winter in New York
Books | Fiction / Romance / Romantic Comedy
4.1
Josie Silver
A young chef stumbles on a secret family recipe that might lead her to the love—and life—she's been looking for in this stunning novel from the New York Times bestselling author of One Day in December When Iris decides to move to New York and restart her culinary career, she realizes she underestimated how big the Big Apple really is—all the nostalgic, New York-set movies she'd watched with her mom while eating their special secret-recipe ice cream didn't quite do it justice. And after spending the last few years in a relationship with a man who kept her world as small as possible, she's feeling a little overwhelmed by it all. But Bobby, Iris's best friend, isn't about to let her hide away. He convinces her to come with him to a famous autumn street fair in Little Italy. As they walk around enjoying all the food and life the neighborhood has to offer, a little family-run gelato shop catches her eye—it's the same shop that's in an old photo of her mother's. When Iris returns the next day out of curiosity, she meets the handsome Gio and learns that the shop is in danger of closing. His uncle, sole keeper of their secret family gelato recipe, is in a coma so the family can't make more. When Iris samples the last remaining batch, she realizes that their gelato recipe and her ice cream recipe are one and the same. But how can she tell them she knows it, when she's not sure why Gio's uncle gave it to her mother in the first place? So Iris offers her services as a chef to help them recreate the recipe and begins to find herself falling for Gio and his family. But when Gio's uncle finally wakes up, all of the secrets Iris has been keeping threaten to ruin the new life—and new love—she's been building all winter long.
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Author
Josie Silver
Pages
384
Publisher
Random House Publishing Group
Published Date
2023-10-03
ISBN
0593722876 9780593722879
Community ReviewsSee all
"This is truly a 3.5 at best, but what I enjoyed, I loved, so, I’ll round up.<br/><br/>First, I’ll just say what I loved. I loved Iris and Gio falling in love, as well as seeing her find her place with the Belottis. The lie storyline was really well done. The third act breakup was delicious and it made me cry. It was exactly what I needed. This was a perfectly executed miscommunication trope, honestly. I just generally really enjoyed her writing and I loved the love in this book. Their romance made me feel as if I was falling in love with them.<br/><br/>What I didn’t love was the fact that 90% of the characters are American and they don’t speak like Americans. Their cadence and word choice were decidedly British. For a book based in New York, with an apparently lightly broke heroine, she spends a lot of time in cabs and zero time on the train. The Adam plot point at the end? With all of them confronting him? Corny and I hated it. The whole confrontation hammed up an otherwise perfect conflict. Adam should have stayed in London for not only Iris’s health, but also the reader’s all over enjoyment of the book."
"It pains me to write a negative-ish review for Josie Silver. I typically love her! One Day in December was good, but I really loved The Two Lives of Lydia Bird (which got me through the early days of the lockdown in 2020) and One Night on This Island (which got me through my ACL repair). So the fact I didn’t like this makes me really sad. It should have been a slam dunk but I could barely get through it. I ended up speed reading the back half just to see how it resolved, and while there were some wonderful parts (the mother daughter story was particularly poignant), mostly I found it trope-y and tired. Like, the whole premise lost me, and I’m queen of suspending my disbelief. But I’ll keep reading the author! It will take more than one dud to put me off."
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Allie Peduto
"Slow burn in the best way for true hot love"
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Natalie Scott