Cover Image: Tiny House in the Trees

Tiny House in the Trees

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Member Reviews

This was my first book by Celia Bonaduce and I now must go and read the other books in the series. Interesting characters and nice story.

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Tiny House in the Trees by Celia Bonaduce takes us to Cobb, Kentucky. Molly McGinnis is working on her master’s thesis in civil engineering while waitressing at Crabby’s Restaurant. It is a constant struggle with money, and Molly is three months in arrears on her rent. Then the owner of Crabby’s decides to close the business and Molly is out of job. She is thankful when dreamboat Quinn Casey offers her a position at his Christmas tree farm. Molly is hoping the trees will provide inspiration for her thesis project and that Quinn will see her in a different light. She has had a crush on Quinn, but Molly has trouble talking when he is around. Bale Barrett owns Bale’s Tiny Dreams and enjoys bouncing ideas off Molly for his tiny homes. Bale has fallen for Molly, but she only sees him as a friend. When Molly and her African Grey parrot, Galileo find themselves homeless, she decides to take up residence in one of Bale’s tiny homes without asking his permission. Molly is making progress of on her thesis project thanks to Bale when tragedy strikes. To find out what happens to Molly, pick up Tiny House in the Trees.

While Tiny House in the Trees is the third A Tiny House Novel, it can be read alone. Each book focuses on a different woman and a tiny house. I thought the book contained good writing and steady pacing. Molly is a unique individual who has too many ideas for her thesis and has trouble focusing on the project at hand. She is supposed to graduate in June, but Molly keeps making changes to her thesis project which is not a hit with Professor Cambridge (a member of her thesis committee). When she finds herself homeless, she comes up with various solutions. Molly is her own worst enemy (her antics made me cringe). She acted more like a teenager than a woman in her 20s (she has growing up to do). I was happy to see her grow as a person. The two men in the story are opposites (of course). Quinn has a lackadaisical attitude towards work and prefers to spend his time gambling and flirting with women. Bale is a hardworking man who creates unique tiny homes that he displays at conventions around the country. He has fallen in love with Molly, but she sees him as a friend. Bale would like to move forward with his life, but Molly ends up in his backyard needing help. I enjoyed the descriptions of Bale’s creative tiny homes. I was not a fan, though, of Molly’s foul mouthed bird, Galileo. I could have done without the foul language. Tiny House in the Trees is a light-hearted, cute romance novel.

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A sweet love story. The characters are so relatable and endearing that I became extremely invested in the story. I found myself rooting for the heroine to achieve her goal and open her eyes to the love that was right in front of her.

I thoroughly enjoyed this book for its lighthearted and uplifting approach. This is the first book by Celia Bonaduce that I read and I will definitely be reading more Tiny House novels.

Thank you to #Netgalley and #KensingtonPublishing for approving my request. The opinions expressed are solely my own.

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This is a third in a quasi series- each novel is really a standalone about a woman and a tiny house. In this case, Molly is struggling with her finances and her masters thesis. She's also in love with Quinn, a man who, well, I'll leave it to you to decide. She parks her tiny house on Bale Barrett's property hoping just to sort of hide out but Bale finds her and then the story takes off. Thanks to Netgalley for the ARC. There's a romance here but there's also a story about a young woman coming into her own.

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Tiny House in the Trees is such a cute story about a young woman struggling to finish her master’s thesis while finding so many financial roadblocks in her way. Molly has good intentions but really sabotages herself so many times by her honest attempts to move forward. She is in love with a face (Quinn) and missing the whole person (Bale). Cringing at all her mishaps is common place as you read and really root for Molly to find a way to succeed.

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This is Book 3 in the Tiny House in the Trees Series.

This is a decent story, with good characters, but it just did not hold my interest. It seemed to jump all over the place.

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