REVIEW: The Seat Filler by Sariah Wilson

[I received a free electronic review copy of this book from Netgalley and Montlake in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.]

Summary


Juliet only agreed to be a seat filler at the awards ceremony to help her best friend, Shelby. Shelby’s mother-in-law to-be owns a company that supplies seat fillers, and she needed help for the event. Juliet is pretty sure the woman is evil, but she would do anything for Shelby who is desperate for the woman’s approval. And apparently “anything” includes sitting next to the gorgeous and annoying Noah Douglas.

After bickering with Noah and embarrassing herself, Juliet figures that’s the end of her contact with Noah. But he keeps popping back into her life. Shelby says he likes Juliet, but she can’t even entertain the thought. Juliet is terrified of kissing. It leads to horrible panic attacks – and embarrassing moments. She’s never even confessed to Shelby why she doesn’t date. But if she is going to have any sort of relationship with Noah, it will have to be as friends.

But when Juliet makes an alcohol-fueled confession of her phobia to Noah, he offers to help her get over her kissing aversion. He’s actually familiar with her condition because it’s part of a script he was recently reviewing. So they could help each other out – she can help him prepare for the role and he can be her “seat filler” with the kissing until she gets past her aversion. But when Juliet starts having real feelings for Noah, she’s afraid it will all be ruined if he finds out she lied to him when they first met.

Review


Delightful! I immediately fell in love with these characters. They are smart and sassy and have amazing chemistry. And the book is FUNNY! Like laughing-out-loud, reading passages to my husband, funny. That’s the best sort of book for me – one that hits all the emotional beats.

At first, the kissing phobia sounded odd to me. But it’s a real phobia, and the author does a good job working it into her story. The source of Juliet’s fear made sense, and the way she and Noah work through it is anchored in real practices for dealing with panic attacks and anxiety.

The characters made this the perfect read for me. I loved them as individuals and as a couple. Even their friends were characters I enjoyed. The big conflict felt a bit blown out of proportion, but the author addresses that in the story as part of the characterization, which was great. Rom-com fans will definitely want to pick this one up. (TW: Panic attacks)

Rating: ♥♥♥♥½*

*♥♥♥♥½ = I loved it! Would re-read.