Guest Review: The Greatest Love Story of All Time by Lucy Robinson

Posted September 19, 2012 by Tracy in Reviews | 2 Comments


It’s Fran’s thirtieth birthday and things are good . . .

She’s bluffed her way into a Very Posh Job and her outlandishly handsome and talented boyfriend Michael is escorting her to the Ritz with a bulge the shape of a ring box in his pocket.

But something has gone wrong. Very wrong. By the end of the evening Fran is howling in bed with a bottle of cheap brandy and one of Michael’s old socks.

In her quest to figure out why her life has suddenly gone down the pan, Fran comes up with a fail safe plan: live like a badger, stalk a stranger called Nellie and cancel her beloved Gin Thursdays in favour of drinking gin every night. But then Fran’s friends force a very different plan on her and it’s nowhere near as fun. How could eight dates possibly make her feel better?

But eventually she agrees. And so begins the greatest love story of all time . . .


When we first meet Fran her friends are breaking in to her home to try and help her. You see Fran is depressed because her boyfriend, Michael, who she’s been dating for 2 years has broken up with her – and on her 30th birthday no less! Bastard. The break up is supposedly just a kind of time out and something that Michael called a 3 month break because he needed a few months on his own. Now as far as Fran knew everything was just peachy keen and Michael was about to propose but nooooo – he breaks up with her instead.

Now Fran is understandably upset and even though her wonderful and freaky friends, Stephania, Dave and Leonie try to help her she is determined that after 3 months Michael will want her back. Her friends come up with a plan called the Eight Date Deal. This plan is that she internet dates 8 different men and by the time the 3 months is up she’ll know what’s out there besides Michael. Fran’s sure that there will be no one as great as Michael is but she agrees to go along with it. There are all kinds of freaks and weirdo’s on the dating site but she does manage to make dates with different men and actually has fun a time or two.

We get to know Fran as she goes on these different dates, spends time with her wonderful friends (mostly at Gin Thursdays), deals with her mother’s alcoholism and her feelings toward the whole Michael situation. She is completely mental during this time in so many different way and at one point is stalking a girl named Nellie because all signs point to the fact that she’s dating Michael. OMG the time and effort that is put into stalking Nellie was as hilarious as it was completely disturbing. It just goes to prove what heartache will do to a previously sound person’s mind. Lol On the other hand Fran did some crazy things on her dates that I would think that a person who was truly in love with someone else would never do – even if they were “on a break.” That had me seriously doubting Fran’s commitment to Michael and frankly not liking Fran very much at that time.

In the end this was a very different book than I thought it would be. I found I had a love hate relationship with Fran…but mostly I ended up liking her…mostly. Her friends were the greatest and I loved them to pieces. We only got to see Michael from someone else’s pov but frankly I didn’t like the guy from the get go. How the love story plays out and how it ends was incredibly surprising and I didn’t see that twist at all – I should have, but I didn’t. The problem here is that I can’t talk about my feelings about that part of the book without giving a boat load of spoilers away. Suffice it to say I needed that part to play out a bit more from a romance standpoint.

The writing was…different. I liked that Robinson had her characters being loud and obnoxious when it suited them and she wasn’t afraid to have them making fools of themselves either. Since it was a very character driven book that was a plus. There is a lot of swearing in the book but since I can sometimes swear with the best of them I didn’t mind at all – just mentioning it in case you don’t like heavy cussing in your books. The biggest issue I had with the writing was the over use of exclamation points. There must be hundreds of them in this story and while they showed, at times, how excitable Fran was, the rest of the time it really detracted from my reading experience.

Overall an entertaining book that did have me laughing from time to time. Despite the issues it was a good story and I’d definitely pick up another book by Robinson.

Rating: 3.75 out of 5

You can read more from Tracy at Tracy’s Place.

This book is available from Michael Joseph (Penguin). You can buy it here (only available on Kindle in UK) in e-format. This book was provided by the publisher for an honest review.


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