Bridget Foley’s Hugo & Rose was a Disappointment

“I intend to put up with nothing I can put down.”

Edgar Allen Poe

I’m going to be totally honest with you—I couldn’t finish Bridget Foley’s Hugo & Rose. When picking up a book is a chore, that’s a huge signal for me that the book and I aren’t a good fit.

Things started off so promisingly. I came across a used copy of Hugo & Rose at a Goodwill Bookstore and the cover caught my eye. You have to admit that it’s gorgeous. The blurb intrigued me, too. It describes a plot in which Rose, a thirty-something wife and mother, is disappointed with her life, but she has dreamt every night since the age of six of a fantastical island and the same boy—Hugo. When she runs across Hugo in real life, they set out to discover the secret of their connection. That sounds fun and interesting, right?

Wrong, and I’m going to tell you why.

(Heads up: There are going to be some spoilers here for the first half of the book. I didn’t get to the ending so I can’t spoil that for you.)

I have seldom found a book so alarmingly depressing. Rose started having dreams of Hugo after she went into a coma after a bicycle accident when she was six. She grows up, marries a man who absolutely adores her, and has three beautiful children. But her husband works a lot and Rose has gotten heavy, so she feels like her whole life is a terrible disappointment. Don’t get me wrong. I understand that clinical depression is a very real thing and I take it seriously. But Foley writes Rose so unsympathetically. She has a therapist but lies to her. She refuses medication and so she “talks herself better.” Sorry, but when you’re as severely depressed as Rose seemed to be, “talking yourself better” isn’t a thing. Either Rose is chemically depressed and she needs medication, or she’s being a big whiny baby about her (extremely) first-world problems. It’s one or the other.

One day, when Rose is taking her kids to a soccer game (horror of horrors), she comes across a man who looks like the Hugo from her dreams. She becomes obsessed with this guy. She leaves her youngest child, a toddler, with a babysitter so she can drive an hour away each day to stalk the guy. When the babysitter isn’t available, Rose just takes her daughter in the car and lets the (again, VERY young child) live in her car seat, distracted by her tablet and eating fast food. All so Rose can follow this man who doesn’t know she exists.

The whole idea made me feel very uncomfortable—almost physically ill. I’m not usually squeamish, but the thought that Rose was ignoring the actual important things in her life so she can stalk someone just gave me the creeps.

Of course, eventually Rose introduces herself and, sure enough, it’s actually the Hugo from her dreams. He turns out to be way underwhelming, but they’re so thrilled to have found each other. I started to have some hope for this book, but then it got weird. For some reason, Hugo and Rose, who are both way more attractive in their shared dreams, never got together in their dreams. Like, in their thirty-plus years of dreaming together, they never kissed or anything in their dreams. Until, that is, Hugo discovers that Rose is an actual person. Once he knows she has a husband and children, that’s when he decides to kiss her in one of their dreams. And suddenly Rose is lusting after this guy who is now very real and very much not her husband.

I hated every second of it. I could see if they’d been romantic in their dreams beforehand. I think most people have dreams like that. It’s the fact that there was no romance until it was real, until it was forbidden, that makes me mad. I get that book characters are supposed to be flawed, but it made them both so unlikeable. I couldn’t get past it.

And so ends my journey with Hugo and Rose. I have no idea how the book ends, and basically this blog post is just my scream into the void about how much this book bugged me. But I really needed to get it out.

Happy Reading (something other than Hugo & Rose)!

Time Travel Romances


“People think they own time. They have watches and clocks and digital pulses. But they are wrong. Time owns them.”

Caroline B. Cooney, Both Sides of Time

If you went to elementary school in the ’90s, you probably did SSR (silent sustained reading) at least a few times a week. It was my absolute favorite part of school. For those thirty minutes or so, I didn’t have to try to solve a math problem or remember the states of matter. I just had to read. It was heaven.

I have vivid memories of picking up my first time-travel book, but I can’t for the life of me place the images I see in my mind’s eye in a particular classroom. Was I in fourth grade or fifth? Who was the teacher? I honestly can’t remember. But whoever it was had a copy of Caroline B. Cooney’s Both Sides of Time on her shelf, and I picked it up on a whim. You may know Cooney’s name from her better known work, The Face on the Milk Carton. I read that book the same year, I think, but Cooney’s Time Travelers series has stuck with me longer.

Annie Lockwood is a modern girl (I mean, modern for the ’90s) who is disappointed by what she considers the lack of romance in her life. When she accidentally falls through time and ends up in 1895, she meets the Stratton family and (predictably) falls in love with Strat, the son and heir. Their romance puts a snag in a lot of people’s plans, there’s a murder mystery, and, of course, the fact that Annie could accidentally go back to the present at any time. It’s definitely a YA series, not overly complicated, but my goodness did I love it. This series is perfect brain candy for days when you just want a satisfying story without having to think too hard.

After Annie and Strat’s adventures, I left time travel alone for a while. Middle school and high school were pretty much dominated by Harry Potter, and who can blame me? I’d say my next real foray into time-travel literature was in college when I read Susanna Kearsley’s The Winter Sea. You guys, I was enamored of this book.

An author visits an old Scottish castle to write about a Jacobite attempt to place exiled James Stewart back on the throne of Scotland. She finds herself remembering this she never knew in the first place, which raises definite questions about her connection to Slains and the events that took place there. It not a time-travel story in the traditional sense, but it definitely has that feel to it. I learned a ton of historical information from this book, and it was really enjoyable. Definitely recommended.

Now here’s where I’ll admit that Susanna Kearsley is, in my opinion, a really inconsistent author. Some of her books are spectacular, and others are mediocre at best. Belleweather is one of the former. It’s, again, not a traditional time-travel story, but it involves the French and Indian War, star-crossed lovers, and ghosts. It’s a perfect beach read and also dripping with historical info. The perfect combination, in my opinion.

And now we come to my other favorite time-travel series. I devoured the first four or five books in Sarah Woodbury’s After Cilmeri series in the course of one weekend. (There are actually 16 books in the series, so forgive me for not showing all of them.) This series centers around Meg, modern young woman who goes back in time and ends up in the company of Llywelyn ap Gruffydd, the last prince of Wales. I knew practically nothing about the history of Wales, but these books sent me into a deep dive. It’s fascinating. Basically, this whole series asks the question, “What would happen if Llywelyn ap Gruffydd didn’t die in an ambush in 1282? What if he’d lived to continue to fight the English and keep Wales an independent nation?” Seriously, such an interesting concept, and each book is a really quick, easy read.

If any of you are looking for some light summer reading with a historical twist, or if you just really dig time-travel romances, you should for sure give some of these a try.

Happy Reading!