This Time Next Year
This Time Next Year book cover

This Time Next Year

Paperback – December 1, 2020

Price
$9.79
Format
Paperback
Pages
368
Publisher
G.P. Putnam's Sons
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0593191200
Dimensions
5.52 x 0.78 x 8.3 inches
Weight
10.4 ounces

Description

"If you want to finish your year, or kick off 2023, with a New Year’s themed read, then This Time Next Year is perfect!"xa0— HerCampus “[A] second-chance romance that makes you feel unabashedly hopeful.” – Refinery29 “[A] cute contemporary romantic comedy...The characters in this page-turning novel are richly drawn and transform substantially, especially Minnie, and all suggest that maybe happy ever after is up to us.” — NPR Books "If you make time for just one holiday read this year, make it Sophie Cousens's This Time Next Year ." — PopSugar "With its distinctive British charm and New Year’s Eve midnight magic, this swoony debut holiday love story is about two people whose paths have crossed numerous times." — Parade "[A] touching debut...Flashbacks to New Year’s past and subplots...add depth, while hilarious secondary characters inject levity in just the right places...Cousens’s debut is ripe with both emotional vulnerability and zaniness." — Publishers Weekly "A brilliantly written story about love, redemption, friendship, and self-empowerment… This book is an absolute delight… [and] a feel-good tale to cozy up with." — San Francisco Book Review “ This Time Next Year is a clever, offbeat romantic comedy...Cousens's colorful, quirky cast becomes embroiled in big, memorable scenes...Rom-com readers will revel in Cousens's wry, lively story, which probes themes of self-discovery, acceptance and forgiveness, and the abiding nature of friendship.” — Shelf Awareness “A funny, pull-at-your-heartstrings read, this is the perfect companion for curling up with hot chocolate and a blanket. Unashamedly romantic and packed full of holiday sparkle, it’s a hug in book form.” —Josie Silver, author of One Day in December "Sparkling and uplifting." —Mhairi McFarlane, author of If I Never Met You "Heart-warming and unashamedly romantic." —Ruth Jones, author of Us Three "Swooningly romantic...I didn't want to put it down'" —Kirsty Greenwood, author of He Will Be Mine "A beautiful debut full of heart, soul and serendipity with characters you can't help but fall in love with." —Alex Brown,xa0author of A Postcard from Italy " This Time Next Year will make you laugh, cry and keep reading long into the night - it's the escapist read everyone needs right now." —Holly Martin, author of Autumn Skies Over Ruby Falls Sophie Cousens worked as a TV producer in London for more than twelve years and now lives on the island of Jersey in the UK, balancing her writing career with working for an arts charity and taking care of her two small children. This Time Next Year is her first novel. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. New Year's Eve 2019 The Night Jam was rammed. Pounding music pulsed through the club and the walls felt sticky with sweat, alcohol, and likely worse. Minnie held tightly to Greg's hand as they jostled through the crowd near the door. "We're never going to get to the bar," Greg shouted back to her. "What?" Minnie yelled back, her ears adjusting to the heavy bass. "We won't be able to get a drink before midnight. I don't even know where Lucy's party is," said Greg. He pointed upward, indicating they should try to push their way upstairs to the terrace on the mezzanine above. Minnie looked at her watch-it was ten to midnight. So far, this whole evening was only validating her hatred of New Year's Eve. Why hadn't she stayed at home and gone to bed early? Then she remembered that her heating had been cut off-she'd come out to keep warm. And Greg had been determined to go to his work friend's party; she would have felt like a bad girlfriend if she'd made him go alone. Minnie let herself be dragged through the throng of pulsating bodies. Finally, they emerged from the crush, stepping out into the cool night air where the thumping bass from the club settled to a more manageable decibel. "Watch it!" Greg said, pushing a drunk guy out of his way. Greg glared at the man, trying to make him notice he'd spilled his beer on someone, but the man was too far gone to care. "I did warn you about spending New Year with me," said Minnie. "Will you stop with this jinxed stuff?" said Greg, shaking his head. "Honestly, it's a thing; bad things happen to me at New Year's. I wouldn't be surprised if this whole building went up in flames before the night's out. Or perhaps a very small asteroid lands right where I'm standing." "I don't think we're having a terrible night because you're jinxed; I think we're having a terrible night because you dragged us to dinner at weird Alan's house on the other side of the galaxy. Now we're arriving at a party two seconds to midnight when everyone's high on moon juice and . . . come in, Star Command?" Greg lifted a finger to his ear, pausing to listen to an imaginary transmission. "Mission control says we're not even at the right party." "Permission to abort the mission?" Minnie asked hopefully. "Denied," said Greg. Minnie and Greg had been dating for five months. They'd met at a march outside City Hall, protesting the lack of affordable housing in London. Greg was the journalist covering the story and Minnie was there supporting Mrs. Melvin, a lady she had been delivering food to since the early days of her business. Minnie and her friend Leila had made a sign for the march that read housing is a human right, but they'd used too much paint on the first H so it looked a bit like an M. On the march, Minnie, Leila, and Mrs. Melvin found themselves walking next to a group of people dressed as large cats wearing monocles and top hats. One wore a T-shirt that read say no to the fat cats! Greg ran over to take a photo of Minnie's sign with the fat cats in the foreground. He shook his head, laughing as he snapped away. "Why are you laughing?" Minnie shouted crossly. "Maybe the cats are so fat because of all the mousing?" Greg said, pointing to her sign. Leila looked and laughed. Minnie rolled her eyes. "It doesn't say mousing," she said, hand firmly on her hip. "It does look like it says mousing, Minnie," said Leila. "Minnie Mouse, this photo will make a great front page," said Greg with a sly smile. "You'd better not," said Minnie, trying not to laugh. She liked men who could make her laugh. She was instantly drawn to Greg's sarcastic manner and his angular features. He had a neatly trimmed brown beard and distinctive, dark-rimmed glasses. Once they started dating, Minnie discovered that it wasn't just for work that Greg liked to make up headlines-he enjoyed captioning everything she did. When Minnie tripped on a step he would say, "Stunner trips on stairs: Stairs seek legal advice; chances are they're going down!" Or when she took the last banana in his fruit bowl, he'd pipe up in an American drawl, "Fruit bowl homicide still unsolved: Did victim go bananas? Cross the lime? Or was it simply a case of sour grapes?" Puns were his thing. But Greg wasn't making any jokes this evening. "Look, you stay here," he said with a sigh, looking around the balcony, "I'll go back through and try to find this private room." "OK, well, if an asteroid lands in your absence, I can only say good-bye, I told you so, and happy New Year," Minnie replied, trying to sound upbeat. As Greg walked away, Minnie turned to look out at the London skyline and shivered. The city exuded a sense of serenity in sharp contrast to the atmosphere of the club. The buildings were bathed in silver moonlight and the night sky was still and cloudless. Minnie wished she could transport herself to the top of another empty skyscraper just to lie down on the flat roof and gaze up at the stars, unfettered by other people. "Ten, nine, eight . . ." People were starting the countdown. "Seven, six, five . . ." Minnie looked at all the couples pulling together in anticipation of the midnight kiss. She was glad Greg wasn't there to kiss her. She never understood why the end of the year had to be marked with the ridiculous convention of everyone locking lips in unison. People behaving like lemmings, following the herd. "Four, three, two, one, HAPPY NEW YEAR!" An explosion of fireworks erupted in the sky, illuminating the city beneath in a shower of multicolored lights. Huge bursts of energy ignited in the darkness, miniature universes flaring into existence only to fade to extinction moments later. Minnie wondered at all that effort for such a fleeting display of brilliance. The city buildings below looked still and stately, unmoved by the frenzy of activity above them. On the balcony of the club, the fireworks cast ugly shadows onto the spaced-out faces of intoxicated people as they swayed and swerved through the crowd. Light shone into grimy corners, full of cigarette butts and discarded plastic glasses. A group of girls tottering about in high heels pushed into her and Minnie had to grab the railing to stay upright. "Happy birthday to me," Minnie said quietly to herself. Then she felt a warm, wet sensation as one of the girls vomited down her back. By the time Greg returned, the terrace had thinned out and Minnie was sitting on the floor by the railings waiting for him. "What are you wearing? Where's your top?" asked Greg. Minnie had folded her sodden shirt into her bag and was now only wearing a gray tank top with frayed spaghetti straps. "Someone was sick on my shirt," she said, hugging her arms around herself. "Oh dear. Well, it's a bit X-rated like that." Greg cupped a hand in front of his mouth to make a pretend microphone. "Weather report in-there's a storm in a D-cup presenting itself." "Well, it's this or vomit-couture," Minnie said, pulling up her top self-consciously. She'd never dream of wearing an outfit this revealing in public. She felt very exposed. "Did you find the party or not?" Greg nodded. He led her back through the club, up another staircase, and then through a double door covered in red velvet, pillared by two bald security guards. "I was here just a minute ago-we're here for the birthday party," Greg explained. The security guard waved them through, glancing at Minnie's chest as she walked past. Minnie folded her arms in front of her. The party on the other side of the red velvet door was everything that the room they had come from was not: The music was at a normal volume, the crowd looked beautifully dressed and sophisticated, waiters were topping up champagne and nobody was being sick over anyone. The exterior curved wall of the room was floor-to-ceiling glass, giving an incredible 180-degree view of the city of London beyond. Minnie immediately felt intimidated. This was a rich person's party, a black tie one at that-she couldn't look more out of place. Minnie had cooked for enough rich people to know how they reacted to people like her; they would patronize her or, worse, look right through her. If she had been wearing the right armor she could have done a good impression of someone who didn't care, but her skimpy vest top was not it. "Greg! You didn't tell me it was black tie," she hissed. "Black tie is a bourgeois construct, Minnie. I wouldn't wear it to my own funeral." Greg scanned the room and then waved to a tall blond girl in a tight red dress. "Lucy!" The girl turned, gave a smile of recognition, then started making her way through the crowd toward them. "Better late than never, hey," Greg said, reaching out to touch her arm. "This is Minnie. Someone was sick on her shirt on the way in." "Hi," said Lucy. Her pillowy lips closed over perfect straight teeth into a sympathetic smile. "Sorry about the sick. It's ridiculous they make you wade through all the plebes to get up to the VIP suite." Minnie shook her head, shrugging it off. "Quite a party," she said, looking around at all the free-flowing booze. How much would a party like this cost? "It's my boyfriend's birthday on the first. We thought we'd use it as an excuse to throw an excessive New Year's Eve bash," Lucy said with a flick of her hand. Then she turned to Minnie with a beaming smile. "Hey, didn't Greg say you were a first of January baby too, Minnie?" "Oh, happy birthday," Greg said hurriedly. Lucy turned to look at him wide-eyed. "Greg, you didn't even wish her a happy birthday yet? Dump him, Minnie!" Lucy laughed and nudged Greg in the ribs. Greg blushed and looked at his feet. "I'm not big on birthdays." Minnie smiled weakly. They stood in silence for a moment. "So, um, Lucy is the food columnist at the paper," Greg said. "I'm queuing up for a jammy gig like that. I saw you were at La Petite Assiette Rouge last week. So bloody jealous, Luce." "It has its downsides, darling. I'm getting fatter and fatter the amount of Michelin-star dinners I'm being forced to eat. I feel like a foie gras goose being stuffed to bursting," said Lucy. Minnie glanced down at Lucy's svelte, gym-toned figure in the skintight look-how-thin-I-am dress. "Oh, diddums, such a hardship," said Greg, nudging his elbow into hers. "Smart, beautiful girl force-fed fine food: Human rights campaigners on standby!" Lucy threw her head back and gave a half-snorting, half-silent laugh, then she clutched Greg's arm, as though she might fall over. "You must have an absolute hoot with this one, Minnie." Minnie nodded, though she wondered if Greg's hilarious newspaper headlines might be starting to get annoying. "Mins is in the food world too," said Greg, standing a little taller. "Runs her own catering business in the charity sector." "That sounds interesting," said Lucy, looking over Minnie's shoulder and waving to someone behind her. "I don't think making pies for the elderly counts as being in the 'food world,' but thanks for bigging me up, hun," Minnie said, rubbing Greg's back. "Do you cater events? Maybe I've come across you?" asked Lucy, turning her attention back to Minnie. "No, we just do savory pies for the elderly. The company's called No Hard Fillings, it's a bit like Meals on Wheels." Lucy blinked her eyes a few times. "No hard feelings?" she said. "No," said Minnie. "No Hard Fillings, as in pie fillings. It's, um, supposed to be funny." "Oh, I see. Ha-ha," Lucy said, wrinkling her nose and giving another silent laugh. "Well, that must be very . . . fulfilling." Greg let out a snorting cackle. "Good one, Luce." He tapped his elbow to Lucy's. "See, the thing is, Minnie's company would be a lot more successful if she didn't keep giving stuff away for free and employing a load of time bandits with zero work ethic." "I don't, and that's not true," Minnie said, bowing her head. "Well, it sounds jolly rewarding," said Lucy. "I find old people so sweet, don't you?" "Some of them are sweet, some of them are total knobs, same as the rest of us," said Minnie. Greg coughed loudly and Minnie gave him a firm pat on the back. "But you're planning to branch out, aren't you, Min?" Greg said, recovering his composure. "That's her current customer base, but she could easily expand-do weddings, corporates, high-caliber events, all sorts. Maybe Lucy could hook you up with some contacts?" "Sure, sure, happy to help," Lucy said, waving at someone across the room and starting to move away. "Listen, I must go mingle. Make yourselves at home; drink our champagne-we ordered way too much. And don't worry about arriving late, the party's hardly started." Lucy cocked her head and flashed them both a well-rehearsed hostess smile, then with a swish of long silky hair she turned to go. Minnie watched Greg's eyes follow her across the room. Seeing them standing empty-handed, a waiter came over to offer them champagne. They both took one and went to clink glasses but missed, Greg's champagne flute bumping into Minnie's wrist. He quickly retracted his hand and took a large swig of drink. "Happy New Year," said Minnie. "Happy New Year," said Greg, then after a pause, "and happy, er, birthday, for real. I, um, I have a present for you back at my flat. Sorry, I didn't have a chance to wrap it." "Don't worry. I said not to get me anything." Greg shuffled his weight between each foot, his eyes flitting around the room. "She's a useful person to know, Lucy Donohue. I told you it would be worth coming tonight. She knows everyone who's anyone in your sector. You should never underestimate how far good contacts will get you in life, Minnie." "I doubt she knows everyone who's anyone in the pie sector," Minnie said, then, affecting a posh voice, "unless it's pastry chefs making choux pie-ettes out of foie gras at La Petite Rue de la Frenchy French." She stuck out her tongue and then laughed. "I don't know why you always do that," Greg said. "I'm trying to help you." "You're right, I'm sorry," said Minnie, feeling chastised. She didn't need Greg to point it out. She could always hear herself sounding bitchy when she felt insecure, and ultimately it only made her feel worse. She bit her lip and fiddled with the pendant on her necklace. Greg pouted, a muscle twitching in his jaw. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • INSTANT
  • NEW YORK TIMES
  • BESTSELLER A GOOD MORNING AMERICA BOOK CLUB PICKTheir lives began together, but their worlds couldn't be more different. After thirty years of missed connections, they're about to meet again...
  • Minnie Cooper knows two things with certainty: that her New Year's birthday is unlucky, and that it's all because of Quinn Hamilton, a man she's never met. Their mothers gave birth to them at the same hospital just after midnight on New Year's Day, but Quinn was given the cash prize for being the first baby born in London in 1990--and the name Minnie was meant to have, as well. With luck like that, it's no wonder each of her birthdays has been more of a disaster than the one before. When Minnie unexpectedly runs into Quinn at a New Year's party on their mutual thirtieth birthday, she sees only more evidence that fortune has continued to favor him. The gorgeous, charming business owner truly seems to have it all--while Minnie's on the brink of losing her pie-making company and her home. But if Quinn and Minnie are from different worlds, why do they keep bumping into each other? And why is it that each fraught encounter leaves them both wanting more?A moving, joyful love story,
  • This Time Next Year
  • explores the way fate leads us to the people we least expect--no matter what the odds.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(1.6K)
★★★★
25%
(1.4K)
★★★
15%
(823)
★★
7%
(384)
23%
(1.3K)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Surprisingly charming!

Not sure how I found this book but I'm so glad I did! I'm not typically a fan of holiday romance novels, as I find them twee and predictable, but this was a really refreshing change. For once, the heroine wasn't an early 20-something woman stumbling around and always saying or doing the wrong thing but is inexpicably charming all the same. Minnie is 30 and still trying to sort out who she is and what kind of life she wants. The male protagonist, Quinn, is as flawed and vulnerable as she is, and somehow it works together to make a lovely story of two people trying to find themselves first so they can find each other. Well written, nicely devloped characters, and a charming story--I bought three copies to give as gifts. Highly recommended, especially if you are looking as forward to New Years 2021 as I am.
47 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Amazing!

I finished this book at 3:00AM with tears starting to steam down from my eyes because it’s that f****** good and cleverly written!
For reference, I started reading on December 1st when it got delivered and finished early morning December 7th, and I have not read a full novel since 2016 prior to this. If you’re a sappy romantic and / or your favorite movie is Love Actually, chances are you will love this book as much as I did. It’s hopeful yet realistic in its portrayal of characters with real issues and real feelings.
16 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Good plot, wish it was cleaner

I picked this book up from the library after having it recommended to me. I was told it was a fairly "clean" read meaning low steam (no sex on the page), but unfortunately that didn't ring true for me. There were a lot of swear words and vulgarity, especially the F word and while it didn't have any sex on the page, so that was technically true, there were a lot of sexual references that pushed the line for me personally. I would rate this above a PG13 as far as content goes.
I ended up skimming through since the plot did sound intriguing and the writing itslef wasn't bad, just the content wasn't my cup of tea.
8 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Started with a bang but out with a whimper

The first half of this book was great. Very fun concept and genuinely funny. It towed the very fine line of being quirky without being cringe worthy— a very difficult accomplishment. However, halfway through the book, that line was forgotten, and the quirk quickly became cringe on every page. I imagine this is the type of book an old person reads and squeals with delight “oh those youngsters!” but any actual young person would raise an eyebrow at just how immature the characters seem to be in comparison to their cohort—especially Minnie, who is so self centered she believes the universe has plotted against her every December 31st for her entire life to make her birthday unlucky for her. 3 stars because I wish the book had ended better, which is a sign of a strong concept and a strong first half, and I don’t want to ignore the good work there.
8 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

An enjoyable and fun rom-com

Minnie Cooper (a person, not a car) is just vrooming through life as a pie-maker for the less fortunate. (Sorry for the dad-joke about Mini Coopers and vrooming.) She’s a New Year’s baby...and was supposed to be named Quinn Cooper. However, while in the hospital in 1990, her mother’s birthing roommate seemingly stole the name for her son.

So now, Minnie is Minnie...and she has the worst luck every year on her birthday! When a chance encounter leads her to meet her “birthday twin”(Quinn Hamilton...a man whose mother stole the name from Minnie’s mother), it doesn’t mean anything. They’re both dating other people and have different values. It could never work...right?

YADA YADA YADA. I think you get where this is going.

It’s not particularly original, but the execution from author Sophie Cousens is well done! I was charmed by the cast, loved the side stories, and rooted for our main characters. The structure is also interesting as the story jumps around to previous timelines...when Minnie and Quinn were in each other’s orbits during previous NYE / birthday celebrations...without even knowing it.

This is a sweet and fun romantic comedy that has LOL moments. Some of them involve singing sheep who are not good at harmonizing, mermaid/unicorn ensembles, an airport scenario involving a phallic object, and a HILARIOUS and awkward scene with a banana (which I read twice...while snorting with laughter).

In a time when things aren’t that enjoyable, it was a treat to just ENJOY this.
7 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Annoying main character

“I don’t think the scale of other peoples problems makes your own easier to live with.”
*
*
This quote! This Time Next Year has one of the most annoying characters I’ve read in awhile. Minnie is convinced she is unlucky for her birthday, January 1st, and complains for 325 pages (there are 330 total) of this book. I’ve seen others describe her as quirky and I think that fits too, but I stand by my first opinion. Lol. The unlikeable characters mixed with the nonlinear timeline, slow burn, and quick ending just didn’t work for me. I enjoyed the London setting the most and have added it to my travel wishlist!
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Super cute and easy read!

I really enjoyed this book. It’s a super cute British rom com, and it was the perfect book to start the year! I’d been saving this one to start on New Year’s Day. This book was extra special to me because my husband is also my “love twin”. We share a birthday and we were also born in the same hospital. We’re January babies too, but much later in the month.

Minnie and Quinn were born one minute apart on New Year’s Day in 1990. After years of just missing each other on New Year’s Eve, Minnie and Quinn finally connect on their 30th birthday. The story features alternating timelines of present day and new years of past, and dual POV switching back and forth between the two characters. Minnie and Quinn are both lovable characters who have faced many struggles albeit with vastly different upbringings. On the surface, Quinn seems to have it all, but there’s much more than meets the eye. Minnie believes she is jinxed and that bad things always happen to her on her birthday all because Quinn stole her name. It was a cute story, but also had lots of depth. It not only explores romantic love, but also love through friendship and family. It was great to watch the characters evolve and grow throughout the book.
3 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Maybe not for everyone but I loved it!

In the midst of a never-ending pandemic, this was a perfect weekend escape. Minnie Moo and Quinn were both characters you can relate to and as I read, I kept wondering which actors they might find to play them on the screen. Normally I would read something like this and pass it along, but I will be hanging onto this and reading it again - "this time next year" and I know the smiles will be just as big as they were this time around. Thanks Sophie!
3 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Does not live up to hype!

Really frustrating!! Could have been so much better. Likable enough characters but the choppiness of the book and the loads of open/dropped storylines made it not enjoyable for me. Glosses over some really serious stuff that it brings up.
3 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Add to cart. NOW.

Buy this book. Now. It’s smart and funny and moving and kind. It’s romantic, but not in a cheesy way. If it’s not a movie made by Reese Witherspoon’s production company in the next couple of years, I’ll eat crow for days. I cannot wait to see what else Sophie writes.
3 people found this helpful