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She Wrote in Her Journal Every Night. A Year Later, He Finally Read It. What He Found Changed Everything.
I want to talk about what it actually feels like to fall in love with someone when you're not ready.
Not the cinematic version. Not the meet-cute or the grand gesture or the slow-motion moment where everything clicks into place, and the soundtrack swells. I mean the messy, inconvenient, infuriating real version where you recognise something in another person that you weren't looking for, and your whole body responds to it before your brain has a chance to intervene, and you spend weeks trying to convince yourself it isn't happening.
That's what Catarina Bonita is doing for the first half of Reminders of You, and it's one of the most honest depictions of falling in love I've read in a long time.
When she arrives in London in the summer of 1994, she is not there to fall in love. She's there to heal. She lost her first love, Ryder Larson, Hollywood's golden boy, less than a year before. She's barely holding her GPA together. She's been chased by paparazzi, pitied by strangers, and quietly coming apart at the seams behind a very polished exterior. She comes to London to do theater, to remember who she is outside of grief and celebrity and everyone else's narrative about her life.
And then she sees Sam Aitken through a window.
She hasn't even met him yet, and she's already annoyed at herself. She literally invents a rule on the spot, no dating castmates, and then spends the next several chapters trying furiously to follow it while her own journal entries betray her completely.
That's the genius of this structure. Catarina writes down everything she won't say out loud. Her journal is where her actual feelings live, unguarded and unedited, and because Sam is reading it a full year after their relationship ended, there's this devastating, dramatic irony running under the whole thing. He's reading what she really thought of him. He's reading how hard she tried not to love him. He's reading the exact moment she stopped fighting it.
And he's reading it alone, in his flat, on his birthday, a year too late.
The summer chapters are magnificent, by the way. Casimiro clearly loves this world, the West End theater scene, the cramped flats, the pub nights, the specific electricity of a group of young people who don't know yet that they're in the best summer of their lives. Sam's flatmates are so fully realised that they could carry their own novel. The friendships feel earned. The banter feels real. There's a texture to it that makes you ache a little for a summer you probably never had.
And inside that world, Sam and Catarina happen to each other.
Slowly. Reluctantly. Wonderfully.
They have the kind of chemistry that the book earns rather than declares. They're not falling for each other because the plot requires it. They're falling for each other because they genuinely find each other fascinating, and because when they talk, the conversation goes somewhere real, and because neither of them has ever met anyone who could keep up with them the way the other one can.
There's a line Sam carries through the entire book, a thing he says not to her face but in his own internal narration: It was you, Cat. It was always you.
Simple as that. No flourishes. No performance. Just a man reading his ex-girlfriend's private journal and recognising himself in every page, and realising that he was really seen by her, and she was seen by him, and somehow they still lost each other.
Casimiro writes this story across two timelines: the London summer of 1994 and Sam's birthday in 1998, and she keeps both of them doing real work. The past isn't just backstory. The present isn't just an aftermath. Each timeline complicates the other. What seems like a simple ending in the past starts to look very different when you're reading it from the inside of Catarina's journal. And what looks like simple grief in the present starts to look like something with a solution.
Or almost a solution. The book doesn't let you off that easily.
But it does leave you with the thing that all the best love stories leave you with: the feeling that these two specific people, with all their specific damage and specific brilliance, belong in each other's orbit. And the desperate, low-grade ache of knowing how close they came to staying there.
Reminders of You by Calliope Casimiro is on Amazon. It is exactly as emotionally reckless as this post makes it sound.
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