
Member Reviews

Having not read Shakespeare’s Midsummer Night’s Dream, I therefore only have a rough idea of the storyline. However, this did not impact my enjoyment of Midsummer Dreams – although I likely missed a few homages to the original.
There are several threads to the tale, all focused around one love triangle (or square…?)
Emily likes to feel safe and be taken care of. She works for her father as his assistant and intends to marry one of his university colleagues, Dominic. Life can’t get much safer than that. However, when her father Theo finds love with the younger Tania, Emily is thrown into turmoil and strongly opposes their marriage. She is determined to break them up.
Whilst Emily is focused on her father’s relationship, she fails to notice that her own fiancé is unhappy in his life. Dominic has followed a path to make his parents happy and now realises that this may not be the right choice for him. He wants to do what makes him happy.
Emily is also unaware that her friend Helen is secretly in love with Dominic. Helen accepts that she and Dominic will only ever be friends, yet she needs to be near to him and is even prepared to put her own career on hold to do so.
The final character in this mix is Alex, Helen’s friend and lodger. Alex is an immoral womaniser who unexpectedly finds himself attracted to Emily – a woman unlike his usual conquests.
One of the appeals about this book for me was the characters. May has provided a quirky and likeable cast, with the exception of Emily. I could not warm to her and I found myself becoming increasingly irritated by her juvenile views and actions. Admittedly, these my opinion of her was tempered somewhat by the end of the book when I fully appreciated how her life experiences had impacted her. I did, however, really like the rest of the protagonists, finding them rounded, believable and, most importantly, likeable.
The story is told in first person point of view by Emily, with support in a third person point of view from Alex, Dominic and Helen. This skillful flitting between characters forces the reader to understand the characters and care about their lives and problems.
The book explores and investigates the relationships between each of the characters, unravelling the layers and exploring how each character has arrived at that point in their lives.
The story ends in its own version of a Shakespeare play, a midsummer ball complete with fairy costumes and a hypnotist. This created a magical fairy-tale scene for the culmination of the tale.
The book is humorous and engaging, and I found myself chuckling away at certain parts of the tale. An entertaining tale, particularly for lovers of romantic comedies.