Review & Excerpt – Love on the Shelf by Sheila Roberts


Synopsis
The battle lines are drawn—between a romance-loving bookseller and the shock jock determined to tear happily-ever-afters apart.
Alice Willoughby and her mom run HEA Books, a cozy shop devoted to love stories and the people who crave them. Alice is great at matching customers with their perfect happily-ever-after…she just can’t seem to find her own.
Enter Parker Black, a disillusioned radio host who’s reinvented himself as a romance-bashing shock jock. Bitter from his breakup with a romance author who turned love into a four-letter word, Parker takes aim at the entire genre—and his on-air rants start stirring up trouble for Alice’s loyal customers and their partners. He’s arrogant, aggravating, and absolutely not book-boyfriend material.
Parker’s crusade leads to spirited debates and bookstore protests, but when unexpected sparks fly between the two of them Alice begins to wonder if her favorite trope—enemies to lovers—might actually be playing out in real life. Parker may claim romance is a lie…but is he protesting a little too much?
With sharp wit and plenty of charm, USA Today bestselling author Sheila Roberts delivers a modern battle of the sexes where the biggest question is simple:
Are romance novels ruining love—or rewriting it?
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Review
What happens when a dejected radio host decides to take on the world of romance? An awakening, for him.
Parker has baggage galore, and Alice is something of a wallflower. But that doesn’t stop the attraction between the two. It is a rocky start, but over time, they both grow and learn something from one another.
The great thing about fiction, is that it isn’t always realistic to what we experience in the world. Parker is petulant based on his past relationships, but that doesn’t excuse bad manners. He does start to redeem himself at various points when the stunts that his producer creates that go against his principles, at least the ones he has. However, he doesn’t really step up to stop the onslaught of negativity or the men who think that women should be in the kitchen and do what they want. Alice is mild mannered, but with everything she experiences, she does learn to step out of her comfort zone.
While not the main characters, I liked Alice’s mom and Parker’s uncle. They seemed grounded in reality.
I was not wild about Alice’s sister, Scarlet, or Scarlet’s husband Matt. They were not communicating and treated each other badly. Both are too bull-headed to look beyond their hurt and understand the other person’s position.
There are some funny moments, and while it took quite some time before Parker and Alice met, and discovered their interest in each other, the story was a fun read. It was a great way to escape.
We give this book 4 paws up.




Excerpt
GOOD GRIEF, ALICE, you’ve got to stop hiding in books. Wake up and see what’s going on around you.”
Alice Willoughby frowned at her older sister. Scarlet had always been a little bossy. Which was hardly surprising, since bossing was what older sisters did, even when they were only
two years older. But this was . . . bossy plus. Not nice.
“It’s bad enough that beast king is turning men into lemmings with his stupid radio show and podcast, but now he’s trying to take down your business. You should be going after him,” Scarlet informed her.
“My business?” Alice repeated. “He’s said stuff about the store?”
“He might as well have.”
Scarlet was heated, Alice got that. Parker Black, radio personality and host of the popular radio talk show Jock Talk, had evolved into Parker Black, woman hater. He’d been using his platform to encourage men to quit being, as he put it, doormats. She’d heard some of their customers complaining about him. They were becoming upset as their boyfriends and husbands
began following him for more than his sports commentary. He was the new champion of American males.
Scarlet’s husband Mark was turning into a Parker Black lemming, going out with the guys after work whenever the spirit moved . . . or the spirits called, and spending what he referred to as his money, money he was goaded to spend because he worked hard and deserved it. All talk of starting a family
had been put on hold because their love life was paused, and their marriage of three years was circling the drain.
“You’ve got to do something,” Scarlet repeated as if Alice hadn’t heard her when she first blew into the bookstore.“Now he’s dissing romance novels.”
“I didn’t know anything about that,” Alice said.
Scarlet did the eye roll of disgust she’d perfected by the time she was eleven. “Of course you didn’t, because you hide in here all day and talk about living happily ever after with dukes and dragon trainers.”
Alice could feel embarrassment draping itself over her face like a red flag. But she rallied. “It seems to me you’ve been showing up for a lot of those happily-ever-after conversations when your
book club meets here.”
“Those are historical and we’re learning about history,” Scarlet said, sounding like a total snob. She was a regular at the Back in Time book club, one of four that met at the store.
“You’ve been known to be seen hanging out with the Chili Peppers a few times, too,” said Alice.
That group liked their books smutty and their heroes smexy. Two other book clubs besides those two met at the store, which, in addition to author signings, kept Alice busy most nights. The Closed-Door
Club preferred sweet romances and Darkness and Dragons was all about dark fantasy. Alice sat
in on all the club meetings, selling them books and passing out home-baked treats.
She didn’t read much of what the Chili Peppers read. When she wanted to escape it was usually into another time, where women wore beautiful gowns and lived on large estates. Where men fought duels, and words of love rolled off their tongues like poetry. But she also enjoyed a good contemporary story, especially if the hero was a millionaire. With a yacht. And a little getaway place in Italy. She was a closed-door girl, preferring love scenes that faded to black like a classic movie. Although she’d been known to give in to the temptation to peek through a keyhole or two . . . and wish. Like she did with every book she read. Sighs and yearnings. Happily-ever-afters. Sighs and yearning, that summed up her love life. Actually, nonexistent summed it up much better.
“Okay, so I like spice,” Scarlet said. “So, sue me. But we’re not talking about that. We’re talking about what this man is doing to you. To all of us.”
“I don’t know what you expect me to do. I’m trying to run a business,” Alice protested. Even though she was only half owner, HEA Books took up all her time and energy. “Anyway,
one angry man isn’t going to affect the bookstore. Almost all our customers are women.”
“Well, Parker Black is affecting men and they’re affecting your customers. Like me! That’s why you need to take this guy on, to fight on behalf of women,” said Scarlet. “This man is a two-legged
virus. He needs to be eradicated.”
“Why don’t you take him on?” Alice argued.
“Because I don’t have the clout you do. You’re the expert on romance.”
On books about romance. There was a big difference.
– Excerpted from Love on the Shelf, MIRA, 2026. Reprinted with permission.
About the Author
USA Today and Publishers Weekly best-selling author Sheila Roberts has written over fifty books under various names, ranging from romance to devotional and self-improvement. Her humor and heart have won her a legion of fans and made her a popular guest speaker. Her holiday novels have been turned into movies for the Lifetime, Hallmark and Great American Family channels. When she’s not out dancing with her husband or hanging out with her girlfriends, she can be found writing about those things near and dear to women’s hearts: family, friends and chocolate.