



The Battle of the Bookshops
A Novel
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- Pre-Order
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- Expected Aug 19, 2025
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
A charming literary-themed novel about a young woman determined to save her great-aunt’s beloved bookshop from extinction by the shiny new competition—which also happens to be run by the handsome son of her family’s rivals.
The cute, seaside town of Portneath has been the home of Capelthorne’s Books for nearly a hundred years…
The shop, in the heart of a high street that stretches crookedly down the hill from the castle to the sea, may be a tad run-down these days, but to Jules Capelthorne, the wonky, dusty world of literary treasures is full of precious childhood memories. When her great-aunt Florence gets too frail to run it alone, Jules ditches her junior publishing job in London and comes home to make the bookshop’s hundredth birthday a celebration to remember.
Jules quickly discovers things are worse than she ever imagined: The bookshop is close to bankruptcy, unlikely to make it to its own centenary celebration, and the lease on the building is up for renewal. With a six-figure sum needed, the future looks bleak.
To make matters worse, the owner of the property is the insufferable Roman Montbeau, from the posh, local family who owns half of Portneath. The Montbeaus and Capelthornes have feuded for years, and Roman has clearly not improved since he tormented Jules as a child. Fresh from a high-flying career in New York, he is on a mission to shake things up, and—unforgivably—proves his point about Capelthorne’s being a relic of the past by opening a new bookshop directly opposite—a shiny, plate-glass-windowed emporium of books.
Jules may not be able to splash the cash on promotions and marketing like the Montbeaus, but she’s got some ideas of her own, plus she has a tenacity that may just win the hardest of hearts and the most hopeless of conflicts.
Let the battle of the bookshops commence…
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Returning to Middlemass, a charming English village first visited in Alexander's Storybook Ending, this enemies-to-lovers contemporary starts strong but fails to stick the landing. Publishing assistant Jules Capelthorne is summoned from London to help out her injured great-aunt Flo at the centennial celebration for her bookshop. Jules only plans to spend the weekend, hoping to avoid unnecessary run-ins with her difficult mother, Maggie, and get back to her demanding job. Businessman Roman Montbeau, heir to a local estate, is surprised to see Jules back in town and regretful when he realizes that his shiny new bookstore will likely quickly put Flo's fading shop out of business. The Montbeau and Capelthorne families have a long-standing feud, and despite Roman's overtures to Jules to smooth their relationship, she's resistant. Their initial animosity is somewhat underplayed, with the duo barely exchanging words in the book's first half. Meanwhile the later switch from enemies to lovers feels far too abrupt. Diehard Alexander fans will enjoy revisiting Middlemass's local couples but others can give this a pass.