Holland Bakker has a crush on a musician who plays guitar at her subway station. She actively changes her routine and goes out of her way to be able to hear him. Then one day, late at night, she is pushed onto the tracks by a crazy guy. The sexy guitar player (Calvin McLoughlin) sees what happens and calls for help. But he disappears as soon as help gets on the scene.
Holland is a nepo baby because her Uncle is a famous musician and Broadway's hottest musical director, and he got her a job at his theater. When her Uncle's show needs another musician, she recommends her sexy guitar player friend. After Calvin plays for Holland's uncle, he is offered the job. Unfortunately, he can't take it because he had an education Visa from Ireland, but he's overstayed for years. He cannot legally work in the United States.
Holland's direct boss is a bit of a dick, and he proposes that Holland marry Calvin, so that Calvin can get his Green Card. Everyone shoots down this ridiculous idea, but it sticks with Holland. She proposes the idea to Calvin, and before they know it, the two are married.
Suddenly, Calvin has moved in with Holland, and the two are learning as much about each other as possible as they prep for government interviews. They find that they really get along and are quite attracted to each other as well.
Calvin and Holland are likable people, and I wanted to see them be together and do well. I liked a lot of their interactions, and the writing was often good and fun.
On the other hand, I had some problems with some aspects of this story, and even some aspects of the romance.
-Holland is pushed onto the subway tracks by a crazy man, and Calvin just calls for help and disappears? He doesn't help her get out from a potentially lethal spot on the tracks? Did I miss something while I was listening? I was expecting a lot more from a romance hero.
-Holland and Calvin make a big deal of texting fake, sexy text messages to each other in order to "prove" their relationship to the powers that be. I don't see how less than a week of text messages would show that they'd been seriously dating for six months before getting married. If anything, it would highlight the opposite--that they'd only started communicating. Maybe they could both say that they just got new phones and lost their text messages??? Anyway, there were a number of problems with the believable marriage part of the storyline that made the story distracting.
-Finally, the first time Holland and Calvin have sex, they wake up in bed together, both too drunk and hungover to even remember what had happened the night before. Eventually, we kind of find out what happened during flashbacks, but I don't find black-out-drunk sex very sexy.
So, this wasn't a bad book, but I came in with high expectations, and they weren't quite met. Maybe I like Christina Lauren books that are more fanciful because then I'm not distracted by the parts of the plot that feel too unrealistic.