With so much of her life in upheaval, Veronica is looking for an escape. Inspired by her best friend, she plans to go to Europe to see four of the places listed on her DNA ancestry report. She treks to County Mayo in Ireland; the Dordogne region of France; the countryside of Lombardy in Italy, and Copenhagen, Denmark. She hopes to learn about where her family lived while also making connections for her rapidly expanding business, but she finds that each stop brings her visions of her ancestors that raise more questions than they answer. And among those pressing questions is how charming Irish castle keeper Niall Callahan will fit into her visions for the future.
Veronica is doing well enough in her life but she has recently broken up with her boyfriend, which should have bothered her more than what actually did. Things change when her sister decides to bring a DNA kit and the results prove she had been adopted, something she already knew but which had not affected her relationship with her parents. Still, talking about this makes her curious to know more about where her ancestors came from and that is why she goes on a month trip to Ireland, Italy, France and Denmark. Since she loves working with food, this is the element she seeks first, but is there room for other good things to present themselves in her path too?
In general, I liked this story and was happy enough with the author's writing style (which is positive since there is another book by her I would like to try one day) but I will be honest and say I wasn't easily "immersed" in the story because what I thought the most was that this book was rather boring.
Veronica has a business in which she provides help to restaurants or similar enterprises although everyone around her thinks she should have her own restaurant. She has never wanted this nor the responsibility since she knows how easy it is for such a dream to go wrong but that doesn't make her feel less successful. Her life has been one of privilege, with her family being well provided financially and emotionally. She has known she is adopted but that never interfered much with her vision of happiness or stability. I did like this, that she wasn't this poor victim or this frustrated villain of her circumstances.
Still, it wasn't truly challenging to read about someone who had it easier for the most part reacting so maturely even though i liked this. Thus, when Veronica is given the chance to travel during her low season at work, with all expanses paid by her father, well, good, but made the logistics seem too easy, too simple. I mean, I would not want a detailed description of every single thing she would do, but this did paint her in a privileged scenario that made me less eager to connect with her.
She then goes to find more about her roots, considering the areas mentioned in the DNA's results, which just happens to be areas out of big city centers. First stop is Ireland (I suppose the gorgeous cover of this book is inspired on that) and from the start, we are introduced to the love interest. I should say this isn't a romance, this is woman's fiction, but this element seemed cute and I did like Niall as a potential partner for Veronica, even more so when we see they share a lot, like their interest in cooking.
From then on, the other places also had their interest, except the place in Denmark which Veronica barely acknowledged, but what was a total fail in all these places was how they were linked to Veronica. I kind of expected more information about how were these places connected to her ancestors, what had happened for people to leave the countries but the explanation was very thin. The author chose to use a magical realism tool, making Veronica have visions of women who are her ancestors. I've found this to be a very poor choice because it seemed to be out of place for the rest of the novel, as if the pieces would not fit properly.
When Veronica finally understands more, connects the dots and has her eureka moment as why this experience mattered and what she might do with her life, I was already a little bored with all the superficial information and how it should be seen, without any character having been properly developed and without it being interesting to see them with more depth, which was lacking. Thus, everything was fine, well presented but not really challenging, not emotionally addictive.











