Photo by Marvin Kho |
Lauren Ho is a reformed legal counsel who now prefers to write for pleasure. Hailing from Malaysia, she is currently based in Singapore, where she’s ostensibly working on her next novel while attempting to parent. She is also the author of the international bestseller, Last Tang Standing.
Her mother still wishes Lauren had gone to medical school, though.
Management consultant Lucie Yi is done waiting for Mr. Right. After a harrowing breakup foiled her plans for children—and drove her to a meltdown in a Tribeca baby store—she’s ready to take matters into her own hands. She signs up for an elective co-parenting website to find a suitable partner with whom to procreate—as platonic as family planning can be.
Collin Read checks all of Lucie’s boxes; he shares a similar cultural background, he’s honest, and most important, he’s ready to become a father. When they match, it doesn’t take long for Lucie to take a leap of faith for her future. So what if her conservative family might not approve? When Lucie becomes pregnant, the pair return to Singapore and, sure enough, her parents refuse to look on the bright side. Even more complicated, Lucie’s ex-fiancĂ© reappears, sparking unresolved feelings and compounding work pressures and the baffling ways her body is changing. Suddenly her straightforward arrangement is falling apart before her very eyes, and Lucie will have to decide how to juggle the demands of the people she loves while pursuing the life she really wants. (Courtesy of Amazon.)
—Jodi Picoult, author of Wish You Were Here
“After Last Tang Standing, my expectations were unreasonably high, but Lauren Ho somehow managed to exceed them with Lucie Yi Is Not A Romantic. Prepare yourselves for a heroine who is laugh-out-loud funny and incredibly savvy. Lauren Ho is an auto-buy author for me!”
—Jesse Q. Sutanto, author of Dial A For Aunties
The best ones are always the ones that say I made their day somehow, that I made them laugh and reflect. Both my novels, Last Tang Standing and now Lucie Yi Is Not A Romantic, feature so-called 'messy' (or maybe let's call them 'realistic!) women from this part of the world (South-East Asia), and explore intergenerational conflict, complex family dynamics, and the search for identity in the face of cultural and societal pressures, even as they shine a light on uncomfortable truths . I use humour to approach difficult subjects tangentially.
How is Lucie similar to or different from you?
If Lucie Yi is Not a Romantic were made into a movie, who would you cast in the leading roles?
What TV series are you currently binge watching?
If we were to visit you right now, what are some places you would take us to see?
Tell us about your best or worst date ever.
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I can definitely be a romantic--love me some romcoms.
ReplyDeleteI am a romantic for certain things. Emotional movies and books, thinking about my city where I was born and lived for along time, and nostalgic events.
ReplyDeleteYes I am - leaving notes, getting emotional watching or reading rom coms.
ReplyDeleteI am a bit of a romantic. I like getting romanced, but I actually like giving my boyfriend romantic gestures more.
ReplyDeleteA bit - enjoy romcoms.
ReplyDeleteYes, I'm a romantic.
ReplyDeleteI am definitely a romantic! I love a good love story.
ReplyDeleteYes, I would consider myself romantic. I let him control the remote.
ReplyDeleteI am not a romantic. I like romantic things and I like romance but I am not a romantic.
ReplyDeletenot really
ReplyDeleteI am a practical romantic in some ways.
ReplyDeleteNancy
allibrary (at) aol (dot) com
Once I know the feeling is mutual I can definitely be very romantic.
ReplyDeleteI’m a romantic …
ReplyDeleteI’m a romantic …
ReplyDeleteI am not a romantic
ReplyDeleteI am not a romantic
ReplyDeleteI'm a romantic. I think that love overcomes anything. I may have rose-coloured glasses, but I like life that way. Idealized.
ReplyDelete