The Art of Loving You

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From: From Love, The Letters

To: Reader

Re: The Art of Loving You- Natasha Bishop


Delivery: Certified Delivery 💜💜💜💜✨

(The Delivery System)

Dear Readers,

The Art of Loving You by Natasha Bishop is about becoming whole enough to sustain love.

There’s something honest I have to admit upfront: at first, I couldn’t see where this book was taking me.

In fact, it started slow enough that I almost put it down. Yes… almost. 😅

And that matters, because I think a good review should hold both truths, what didn’t work, and what absolutely did.

What changed everything for me was Tanya’s scavenger hunt. And from there? I was all in. 👏

That was the turning point.

What first felt uncertain suddenly opened into something layered with substance, adventure, and just enough suspense to keep me flipping pages, wanting to know what clue would come next, what piece of Tanya’s life would be revealed, and what it would awaken in Micah and Dani along the way.

And honestly? Tanya may have been the heart of this book. I said what I said. 🤭

👀 Maybe even the main character.

Through her clues, her story unfolds in a way that makes you grow attached to her just as the characters have. She becomes more than a device moving the plot forward she becomes part of the emotional center of the story.

And that’s where this book surprised me.

Because The Art of Loving You isn’t really about falling in love. It’s about becoming whole enough to sustain it.

Micah and Dani’s journey touched so much more than romance. It held grief, unforgiveness, forgiveness, healing, self-esteem, confidence, and the quiet but necessary work of learning to love yourself before asking someone else to carry what you haven’t healed.

That message felt constant: a secure foundation is steady ground for a relationship to bear the brunt of any storm.

And maybe that’s why 🌪️ Storm and Stormchaser🌪️ felt like more than nicknames.

They feel symbolic.

Love here isn’t presented as something that saves you.

It’s something strengthened when two people have done enough inner work to show up fully for each other.

I loved that.

🚨 Spoiler Alert 🚨

I also appreciated that Micah and Dani were always endgame to me. I believe in love. I’m a sucker for a happy ending. Always. 🫶

But what made their love story work wasn’t simply that they ended up together… it was that the book made their emotional growth matter just as much as the romance.

If I had one critique, it’s that I wanted more info on the characters initially brought to us in the first book of The Forever Falling Series , Only for the Week, especially Amerie and Arnold. Since this is part of a series, I found myself wanting more follow-up and more connection to the characters established in the first book.

And while I do think this can technically be read as a standalone, I wouldn’t recommend it. I think reading the first book gives this one more weight.

For me, this was a beautiful love story once it found its footing.

A slow start, yes.

But an awesome plot. But an awesome plot.
Trust the process. ✨

A moving emotional arc.

And a reminder that love built on healing stands stronger than love built on need.

That, to me, is what The Art of Loving You gets right.

It understands that love isn’t just about finding the right person.

It’s about becoming the person who can love well when you do.

From Love,

The Letters

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