Love in the Outback – Switcheroo by Cheyenne Blue

Switcheroo by Cheyenne Blue

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


I’ve been eagerly awaiting the newest Cheyenne Blue book and dove right in once I got my hands on the ARC.

You can read the blurb to find out all the details so I’m going to jump right into what I loved and a little of what didn’t quite work for me.

I think the biggest thing I loved was the country. The clear love letter Cheyenne Blue writes to the outback. She made me want to pack up and move. In another life, I could have been Jenna and been completely happy. I’m from the American mid-west and absolutely live for my time in the forests and near lakes and rivers and streams. But I also lived in Arizona and loved the desert. The outdoors is where I want to spend my time – even though I now spend way too much time indoors…

Jenna and her love of the land was my number one favorite part of the book. I did connect with Hayley, too. Ms. Blue did a great job of capturing her awkwardness and insecurity and desire to work hard. The way she related to the others at the station felt genuine and I enjoyed being a fly on the wall (along with loads of other flies, apparently.)

There were a couple of things that kept Switcheroo from being a 5-star book for me. One is small but it kept pulling me out of the story. Hayley’s NY slang… Word, wack, and hip are slang we used in the 90s and are among those my 19 year-old son teases me for saying. Maybe they’ve made a resurgence in NY though. The use of “yeah, nah” and “nah, yeah” didn’t feel right in more serious conversations. And I have no idea what “dead ass” means. I couldn’t figure it out from context. I totally get using slang to help cement her character as a NYC woman but in some of the scenes, it held me back from connecting and staying in the story.

The other thing that I had trouble with was feeling the chemistry between Jenna and Hayley. I loved them both and I wanted them together but I just never felt that sexual connection between them.

I still definitely recommend Switcheroo. It reminded me a lot of Susan X. Meagher’s Almost Heaven. Meagher made me fall in love with the land and people of West Virginia just as much as Blue made me fall in love with Queensland outback and Ghost Gum Station. The fish-out-of-water trope was well done in both books, too, come to think of it…

Switcheroo is another win for Cheyenne Blue in my book. A big thanks to her, Ylva, and NetGalley for the ARC. I appreciate it!






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