
*I was sent a copy of Rhythm & Muse in exchange for an honest review. Thank you to HarperCollins and India Hill Brown*
Synopsis:
Cinderella meets Cyrano in this pitch-perfect YA rom-com that is a celebration of Black joy, first crushes, and putting your heart on the line for love. Darren Johnson lives in his head. There, he can pine for his crushโtotal dream girl, Delia Dawsonโin peace, away from the unsolicited opinions of his talkative family and showboat friends. When Delia announces a theme song contest for her popular podcast, Dillie D in the Place to Be, Darrenโs friendsโconvinced heโll never make a moveโsubmit one of his secret side projects for consideration. After the anonymous romantic verse catches Dillieโs ear, she sets out to uncover the mystery singer behind the track. Now Darren must decide: Is he ready to step out of the shadows and take the lead in his own life?
Review:
I was really excited to read Rhythm & Muse because I love books about music. Unfortunately, I didnโt love this one. It was pretty lacklustre from start to finish and I basically only finished it because it was a very quick read.
I really didnโt like Darren, like at all. He was constantly judging people for their music tastes and would also have the meanest thoughts on peopleโs performances. This made him a huge hypocrite because the reason he stopped performing was because of the unsolicited opinions and mean comments he got after one performance. Now, I was a vocalist, I studied it at college and did god knows how many performances, trust me when I say people are never harsh about your signing to your face. Well unless youโre terrible, but apparently Darren has the best voice in the world, so it just doesnโt add up.
He was always weirdly obsessed with Delia. Thereโs having a crush on someone and then thereโs crazy stalker level. Darren was very close to the second one. There was little to no development of their relationship and sorry *spoiler* but there was literally no reason for Delia to want to date him. If someone wants to date you because you won their podcast song competition, they probably donโt actually like you.
Iโm assuming the author doesnโt know anything about recording music because they mentioned something about producing or mastering the track in an hour, which is not how it works. Unless they have the quickest producer in the world, but this was a bunch of teens in what I can only imagine is a crappy studio (they are very expensive to hire) so I donโt think that was the case.
Itโs such a shame to say that I didnโt get on with Rhythm & Muse. It was one of my most anticipated reads but it fell completely flat. I was hoping to have some good points to talk about, but as soon as I began writing this review, I couldnโt think of any other than it being a fast read.
Check out Young Creative Press on all socials
You can also check out my StoryGraph here
Like this post? Why not read this one too: ARC Review: Kill Your Darlings by L.E Harper
[…] Like this post? Why not read this one too: ARC Review: Rhythm & Muse by India Hill Brown […]
[…] Like this post? Why not read this one too:ย ARC Review: Rhythm & Muse by India Hill Brown […]