Hideaway Heart is one of Melanie Harlow’s contemporary romance novels, working in the territory she handles best. Harlow has built one of the more dependable contemporary romance catalogues of the past decade, with a particular gift for emotionally rich slow burn romances and ensemble novels set in interconnected small towns. Her readers know her for the After We Fall era of her contemporary work, the various Cloverleigh Farms and One Riverside Drive series that have followed, and the Speak Easy historical romance series that runs alongside her contemporary work.
Hideaway Heart sits comfortably in Harlow’s catalogue. Her heroines tend to be women in their thirties or older, dealing with the kinds of complications that come with established lives. Divorce. Children. Career changes. Family obligations. The romance has to find its way through all of that rather than pretending none of it exists. Her heroes are usually men with their own complications who recognize the heroine as someone worth the work that the relationship is going to require. The slow recognition that the two of them might be able to build something together drives the central romance forward across the page count.
What distinguishes Harlow from a lot of her peers is the way she balances the heat and the heart. Her sex scenes are explicit but they always serve the relationship, and her readers know to expect significant emotional payoff alongside the physical chemistry. The dialogue carries a lot of the work and her couples talk to each other like adults rather than miscommunicate their way through three quarters of the book. That alone puts her ahead of a lot of contemporary romance.
For readers who enjoy Devney Perry, Catherine Cowles, Willow Aster, or Kandi Steiner, Harlow is squarely in the same neighborhood. Her catalogue is large enough that picking a starting point can feel daunting, but most of her standalones can be read in any order, and the connected series allow new readers to start anywhere without losing too much context. Hideaway Heart is a comfortable, well crafted entry into her work and a fair sample of what she does best. For new readers looking for an emotionally satisfying weekend read, this is a fine place to start.