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Jane L. Rosen

Author of Nine Women, One Dress

7+ Works 716 Members 55 Reviews

Series

Works by Jane L. Rosen

Nine Women, One Dress (2016) 348 copies, 27 reviews
Eliza Starts a Rumor (2020) 160 copies, 12 reviews
A Shoe Story (2022) 73 copies, 7 reviews
On Fire Island (2023) 58 copies, 3 reviews
Seven Summer Weekends (2024) 50 copies, 4 reviews
Songs of Summer (2025) 24 copies, 2 reviews
The Thread (2013) 3 copies

Associated Works

On Being Jewish Now: Reflections from Authors and Advocates (2024) — Contributor — 41 copies, 2 reviews

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female

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Reviews

57 reviews
We last heard from Jane L. Rosen with her wonderful novel On Fire Island, which made my list of the Most Compelling Books of 2023. In it, we met young widower Ben grieving the tragic loss of his wife. His older neighbor Shep, a widower himself, helps Ben navigate his new life, and Ben in turn takes a teen neighbor under his wing. (She is one of my all-time favorite characters.)

Rosen returns to the same Fire Island community with Seven Summer Weekends. Addison is poised to become the first show more female head of the art department at a prestigious Manhattan advertising agency when she accidentally sends a message to everyone in a Zoom that ends her career.

When an aunt that Addison hasn’t seen in years passes away, she leaves Addison her Fire Island home. Addison goes to Fire Island to regroup, and plans to sell the house to tide her over until she can find a new job.

There’s one catch though- the guest house on the property is booked throughout the summer so Addison can’t sell the home until the fall. And the hot neighbor guy tells Addison that her aunt promised him that he could buy the house for a very reasonable price.

It turns out the neighbor is Ben, the young widower from On Fire Island. Ben and Addison have a push-pull relationship- one moment Addison is very attracted to him, the next he does something that makes her rethink her friendship with him.

Addison discovers that each of the weekly guests have a connection to her aunt, and through them she learns more about the aunt she never knew due to a family feud between her parents and her aunt. As the summer goes on, Addison becomes more involved in the Fire Island community and questions her future- should she stay or sell?

I loved Seven Summer Weekends just as much as On Fire Island, and that is a lot. The characters are interesting (Shep makes an appearance!), and Rosen’s writing is filled humor, heart, and even some steamy heat. I'd like to take the ferry to Fire Island and hang out with Addison, Ben, and the gang. I give it my highest recommendation.
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We last heard from Jane L. Rosen with her wonderful novel On Fire Island, which made my list of the Most Compelling Books of 2023. In it, we met young widower Ben grieving the tragic loss of his wife. His older neighbor Shep, a widower himself, helps Ben navigate his new life, and Ben in turn takes a teen neighbor under his wing. (She is one of my all-time favorite characters.)

Rosen returns to the same Fire Island community with Seven Summer Weekends. Addison is poised to become the first show more female head of the art department at a prestigious Manhattan advertising agency when she accidentally sends a message to everyone in a Zoom that ends her career.

When an aunt that Addison hasn’t seen in years passes away, she leaves Addison her Fire Island home. Addison goes to Fire Island to regroup, and plans to sell the house to tide her over until she can find a new job.

There’s one catch though- the guest house on the property is booked throughout the summer so Addison can’t sell the home until the fall. And the hot neighbor guy tells Addison that her aunt promised him that he could buy the house for a very reasonable price.

It turns out the neighbor is Ben, the young widower from On Fire Island. Ben and Addison have a push-pull relationship- one moment Addison is very attracted to him, the next he does something that makes her rethink her friendship with him.

Addison discovers that each of the weekly guests have a connection to her aunt, and through them she learns more about the aunt she never knew due to a family feud between her parents and her aunt. As the summer goes on, Addison becomes more involved in the Fire Island community and questions her future- should she stay or sell?

I loved Seven Summer Weekends just as much as On Fire Island, and that is a lot. The characters are interesting (Shep makes an appearance!), and Rosen’s writing is filled humor, heart, and even some steamy heat. I'd like to take the ferry to Fire Island and hang out with Addison, Ben, and the gang. I give it my highest recommendation.
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Actually absolutely marvellous. Maybe on surface level it looks like another airheaded chick lit book, but Rosen goes into so much depth at every moment. I'm such a big fan of the ways she crafts narratives, and Esme did not disappoint here (though Sy and Elvis were obviously my favourite characters.) I wasn't expecting the reveal that Esme's dad was an alcoholic but it was well integrated in and I really admired the way it was incorporated into helping Esme figure herself out. What a show more brilliant book! show less
4.25 Stars
A delayed coming-of-age (30 being the new 20) love story (familial, romantic, and self love), this work is the first one I've read in the Fire Island series or by this author and I loved it. Loved the premise, the characters and setting, the soundtrack/playlist, and the themes. It's one part romance, one part family drama and reconciliation, and one part the happier ending that you hope all adoptees receive when searching for their birth families. It's well-written and fast-paced. show more I felt the MCs were closer in age to 20 than 30, and, other than The Proclaimers are Scottish and not Irish, the novel is a solid Summer beach read. I'm planning to read other Fire Island books now too.

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Works
7
Also by
1
Members
716
Popularity
#35,435
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
55
ISBNs
48
Languages
1

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