
Member Reviews

Cute and predictable story but worth the read. Perfect for a quick read to get away from reality for a bit.

This book is very fast paced and a very quick read. I love books that revolve around a workplace setting, and I also enjoy enemies to lovers plots as well, so this book seemed perfect when I looked at it.
Since it was listed as read now, I decided to give it a chance.
I didn't find myself getting too invested in the actual relationship throughout the book, and instead found myself more interested in Nami's love for her company and her employees and her wonderful drive to protect both of those things. This book can easily be read in 1-2 days, if a reader is more interested in faster paced books. It only took me longer than that to read it because I have been working a lot lately. I hope the author releases more books in the future, and I would love to read them.

The Takeover is your classic Workplace Enemies to Lovers Romance. This was such cute, quick read. I also think this book has such a great diversity and bipoc representation. It would honestly make such a cute movie. Someone needs to make that happen!
The story follows Nami, who makes a wish on her 30th birthday for her soulmate, but instead she gets sent her “Hate Mate”. I mean, you can pretty much figure out the entire plot just by the title. It was very cute, but also very predictable. Which I don’t necessarily hate.
Overall I really enjoyed this, but, I am finding I love little snippets of the story rather than the story as a whole. I absolutely loved Jae Lee’s family, and found them way more interesting than Nami & Jae Lees’ relationship. I could honestly read an entire book just about them. I loved the cute little office hi-jinks (Chair Gate made me laugh out loud more than once) but I didn’t necessarily feel invested in any of the side characters themselves, just their pranks & whiteboard votes. Lol This is also how I felt about Nami & Jae Lee as well, I didn’t really love them… but loved their banter and was super into in their little rom-com scenes. But don’t know how invested I really was in their relationship.
If you are looking for a classic romcom, I definitely recommend The Takeover. It is the perfect palate cleanser in between those literary fiction or high fantasy books.

This story was a breath of fresh air. Enjoyed the hate-love banter of the Jae and Namby and their quick wit. I am going out to look at a “Wegner Swivel” chair. I laughed out loud in several places while reading. An excellent and entertaining read. Definite addition to your TBR list.

Absolute gem!
Words can’t express how much I loved reading this! More than the fact that it’s incredibly well written it was just so fun.
The Takeover is so engaging I was all in from the first chapter.
The banter in this book had me smiling all throughout.
There’s also a good dose of relatability: BIPOC characters, diverse representation, family and interpersonal issues, self esteem and reflection acknowledgement, etc. I think it’s be easy for just about any reader to find something relatable to them in this book.

As I was reading this, I felt like the writing style was super familiar, and then I checked and saw that Tanamachi also wrote as Cara Lockwood on the old Red Dress Ink imprint, which was my favorite back in the day! Based on this book, her new stuff is also great and a lot of fun. This is such a classic enemies-to-lovers, with Naomi and Jae obviously in hate-lust right from the beginning, and a lot of factors against their relationship - not the least of which is that Jae works for a large, evil corporation intent on swallowing up small companies and mining their data, including the beloved but struggling travel startup that Nami and her friend started. You know how it’s’ all going to turn out - it’s a romcom, after all - but it’s sun a fun ride getting there. The little interspersed company Slack messages, the fictitious app names that seem like thinly veiled references to real companies, and the over-the-top geeky developers were cute references to the tech world that the book was set in. The developers were one place I felt like it was a bit much, but only because I work in software and I know a lot of developers, so I get the stereotype but…. They’re still people with nuance, and not every single one of them likes the traditional nerd stuff…. But that didn’t detract from the story and if you’re not in tech you probably will find it cute and funny. All in all, a satisfying, cute romantic comedy and I hope to read more by this author in the future.

I love a good workplace enemy to lover book and this one delivered after a few slumps.
Nami is the founder of a tech company which is about to lose its funding, so she makes a birthday wish: she'd like to find her soulmate. The Universe sent her the opposite: her high school rival. She'd like a refund now, please.
Jae was the most popular kid in school and now he thrives on the idea of challenges was a high ranking which is why the company he works for is planning a takeover of Nami's company. Only, Jae didn't plan on his reaction to Nami after all these years apart.
With Nami putting up a fight and Jae trying to make her see that his offer is the best and only option, a workplace war has begun. What will they lose? Their jobs or their hearts?
This book was so fun! Full of nerdy references, crazy but realistic family dynamics, a little spice, and office pranks gone right, THE TAKEOVER deserves a place in your home.
My thanks to NetGalley and St. Martin's Griffin for this eARC in exchange for my honest opinion.

The Takeover by Cara Tanamachi
Nami Reid has spent years pouring her heart and soul into the tech startup she co-founded, Toggle. It means more to her than anything, including the ex fiancé who left her due to always coming in second to Toggle. When Nami’s 30th birthday arrives and her mother throws her a surprise party that is only attended by her family, Nami realizes she’s lonely and uses her birthday wish to ask the universe to send her a soulmate. Instead, the universe sends her high school nemesis back into her life. Jae Lee has built a career on buying struggling startups and stripping them for parts, and Toggle is his latest hostile takeover target unless Nami can stop him.
This was a super fun high school nemesis turned workplace nemesis turned more romantic comedy. The banter between Nami and Jae was absolutely hysterical right from the start, and I absolutely loved their back and forth text exchanges. Nami pulled at my heartstrings as she worked so hard to make the world a better place while protecting and fighting for the employees and company she loved. Her steadfast commitment to doing the right thing was admirable and relatable.
I loved the complicated but loving family dynamics that both Nami and Jae had. It was interesting to explore the different expectations that a Japanese and a Korean family had for their children. Both Jae’s dad and Nami’s mom wanted the best for their children but the ways that they went about it were really interesting to explore.
The epilogue was one of the cutest parts of the whole book and had me grinning from ear to ear. I only wish that I had read The Second You’re Single (Nami’s sister Sora’s book that is chronologically before this) first to truly appreciate all the feels for both couples but I will definitely go back and read it now!
Recommended for all romantic comedy readers and especially those that love: 🤓 high school rivals 📈 hostile workplace takeover 🤭 fast paced banter 🍜spicy ramen competitions 🎾 mixed doubles tennis 🪑extremely expensive and rare office chairs ❤️🩹 they make each other better

loved this enemies to lovers and workers that are in the mix. loved the family and friends. loved that they both learned and helped each other and that they fell in love. loved the ending with the sister and her wedding and that he wants to marry her. good romance and loved the messages about the missing chair.

A fun enemies to lovers, high school to adulthood rom com!
Nami Reid has worked hard her whole life….she worked through high school to help pay the bills and succeeded in college and now has her own tech company start-up. But as she’s about to turn 30, it seems like everything is falling apart. Her fiancé cheats on her, her start-up is about to go under, and of all people her old high school nemesis sends her a text out of nowhere.
Enter Jae Lee, Nami’s number one enemy in high school. He narrowly beat her out to be valedictorian and was always trying to upstage her in varsity tennis. He was smart, attractive, and everybody loved him. She hated him then and can’t believe after all these years he’s contacting her now. Apparently, he’s back home in Chicago and wants to catch up. But it’s so much more than that.
Nami’s birthday wish is a soulmate and she gets….Jae Lee?! And so their worlds collide for better or worse and we all are fortunate enough to witness it….enjoy!
Thank you to NetGalley and St. Martin’s Griffin for sharing this ARC with me in exchange for my honest review.

Thanks NetGalley for the ARC
Opinions are my own
Enemies to lovers rom com featuring likeable characters ,fun banter and a happy ending. The two main characters were high school rivals, always competing for top grades , and have not seen each other for years. When Nami's business is in trouble , she meets up with her high school nemesis as his company is poised to take over Nami's company, much to her dismay. Their rivalry begins again and leads to something more, but can it last in a cut throat business world?
Both of the main characters show growth , especially Jae who finally figures out what's most important to him and makes the changes necessary to achieve these things.
Also reviewed on Goodreads https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/5749882549

4 Stars
That was super fun read! I love a good enemies to lovers and the back and forth banter and antagonism that followed from their high school years was highly charming and entertaining. It really showed how bonding over shared experiences (tennis, families, ramen) can mend bridges and build foundations for relationships.
This whole thing was super sweet. The resolution and HEA was a much needed balm for the soul.

4 stars
Nami is coming out of her broken engagement and focusing her time and energy on her tech company start-up. But things hit a snag when funding doesn’t come through as planned and an old nemesis, Jae, shows back up to cause havoc.
Quick and fun read. This is the second book in a series by the author but can be read as a stand-alone. The characters have some depth and the writing is pretty decent. Easily digestible and leaves you feeling good.

This book is so charming!
It was so fun learning about the characters! Nami is headstrong, opinionated, and protective. I love that she cared so much about her company and her employees. As someone who values company culture, I love the vibes of Toggle. The office banter and shenanigans really had me smiling from ear to ear the wholeee time! It made it easy to see how close knit the office relationships were, except with Dell. Of course, I hated Dell as well but his character was also good comedic relief. The snippets of quotes from group chats at the beginning of certain chapters were super entertaining!
Jae is intelligent and literally worships Nami. I love that he fell harder and matches her so well. In terms of the romance plot, it was a little predictable but it didn’t make the book any less enjoyable. I loved seeing the family dynamics and the asian representation as well as LGBTQ and disability representation. It made the characters feel fleshed out and real.
I didn’t love that the businesses in the book reflected corporations in real life but it definitely made the business aspect of the book easily digestible. There were also a lot of pop culture references that I wasn’t familiar with but I was able to understand the gist of the references. I think it added personality!
Overall, this book was a quick and enjoyable read. Plus, the epilogues really wrapped it up soooo nicely!

Look, I'm not going to pretend this wasn't wildly formulaic, but it was also fun and compulsively readable. More importantly, there were exactly zero characters who set my teeth on edge, which I really needed.

Nami Reid is unironically “World’s Best Boss” of Toggle. Nami and her Girl Boss partner Imani have created a travel app that doesn’t mine it’s users data. They’re a dream to work for. Their employees love them. However with the pandemic travel isn’t as lucrative as it once was.
Imani and Nami have to look at all the options that keep Toggle alive - includes potentially selling.
Enter Jae Lee, Nani’s highscool nemisis and VP of acquisitions for Rainforest (a company that is suspiciously similar to a certain company that delivers boxes). Jae has his eye on Toggle and on Nami.
I loved the enemies to lovers, girl bosses, and found family that The Takeover has.

There's a lot to like in The Takeover - which sort of straddles the line between enemies-to-lovers and second chance romance. The chemistry between Nami and Jae is immediate and explosive - even when they're at each other's throats, it's clear there's something more between the two of them. And I also enjoyed that both Nami and Jae were professionals at their jobs; the typical trope of hot mess FMC was not present here, which was a welcome relief. I enjoy watching two competent adults fall in love.
What I didn't love was the way the third act conflict came up and resolved itself. It felt a little cheap the way everything fell into place, and it also felt like it was a pretty convenient obstacle, all things considered. That said, I liked the first 75% enough to give this a solid 3.5 stars!

This story was an air tight enemies-to-lovers between Nami and Jae hate each other in high school. The story was fun but of course had the usual third act conflict that definitely pulled me out of it. Other than that, I was thoroughly entertained.
Thank you to St. Martin's Press, St. Martin's Griffin, and NetGalley for providing an eARC for an honest review.

Ugh this book just didn’t work for me. I LOATHE pop culture references in books and unfortunately this had them. The rivalry felt corny and childish.

title: The Takeover
author: Cara Tanamachi
publisher: St. Martin's Griffin
publication date: January 30, 2024
pages: 304
peppers: 2 (on this scale)
warnings: broken bones, evil corporations, veiled references to billionaires
summary: Nami's amazing tech company Toggle is in financial trouble, and her high school nemesis Jae appears as the buying agent for an Amazon.com doppelgänger, Rainforest. While she's trying to avoid the buyout, they're falling in love.
tropes:
enemies to lovers
high school nemesis
loving grandmother
big corporation buying out family-ish business
siblings get married first
demanding parents
what I liked:
lots of great office hijinks
fun hate-flirting
Chicago/Evanston setting (including Evanston Township High School -- Hi, JG, GM, JM!)
what I didn’t like: not much -- a fun read.
overall rating: 5 (of 5 stars)