ŷ

Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Roux for Two

Rate this book
When her celebrity chef boss is taken down in a sexual harassment scandal, Chelsea Boudreaux's dream of getting her own cooking show comes true. Her hometown of Duchesne, Louisiana, provides the perfect backdrop for her modern takes on traditional Cajun fare. Vindicating herself to the mother who never believed in her is icing on the cake.



Bryce Cormier never left Duchesne and has no regrets, except that falling in love as a trans guy in a tiny town is easier said than done. When Chelsea comes home after more than a decade away, Bryce thinks he may have found the perfect woman. At least until Chelsea's burgeoning celebrity spills over and turns his world upside down.

It turns out love is like a good gumbo--what seems simple is complex, and the best results require a bit of courage. And like all the recipes say... First, you make a roux.

254 pages, Paperback

First published May 16, 2023

11 people are currently reading
151 people want to read

About the author

Aurora Rey

33books280followers
Aurora Rey is a college dean by day and a life coach award-winning author of queer romance author the rest of the time, except when she’s cooking, baking, riding the tractor, or pining for goats. She grew up in a small town in south Louisiana, daydreaming about New England. She keeps a special place in her heart for the South, especially the food and the ways women are raised to be strong, even if they're taught not to show it. After a brief dalliance with biochemistry, she completed both a B.A. and an M.A. in English.

She is the author of the Cape End Romance series and several standalone contemporary lesbian romance novels and novellas. She is has been a finalist for the Lambda Literary, RITA®, and Golden Crown Literary Society awards, but loves reader feedback the most. She lives in Ithaca, New York with her dog and whatever wildlife has taken up residence in the pond.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
32 (41%)
4 stars
23 (29%)
3 stars
17 (21%)
2 stars
6 (7%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 39 reviews
Profile Image for Sam.
811 reviews114 followers
April 23, 2023
The blurb of this book says it all: It turns out love is like a good gumbo—what seems simple is complex, and the best results require a bit of courage. And like all the recipes say...First, you make a roux.

What seems like a simple task, and maybe the first, when you write a book is to have an engaging story, fun characters, and of course, it needs to be well-written. For me, this book only ticks the well-written box. I'm sorry to report that this book was just boring. The first 15% actually annoyed me. When writing a plus-sized character (which I'm all for) this is the way to do it in my opinion. It felt a lot like fat shaming. The cover played a big role in that as well. You have a somewhat confident curvy woman as your main character and you put some sort of stick on the cover? Sorry, that just doesn't fly�.
The courage aspect was available, writing a trans character like this isn't something you see too often and I think that's done well.

Do you know what all recipes say? Season! This book definitely needed some seasoning. Don't get me wrong, not on the intimate parts, there is plenty of innuendo and sexy time. And I think that’s all it was innuendo from the start and sex pretty early on. A low angst book is great, but this was just capital B Boring.
The story and the characters are flat and never really held my attention. I couldn't wait to finish it. It was just boring.

2 stars

ARC received from the publisher (Bold Stroke Books) through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review
Profile Image for Betty.
649 reviews89 followers
May 22, 2023
Roux for Two by Aurora Rey is a delightful, easygoing, and gentle celebrity romance set in small town Louisiana. As the title of this book suggests, there is also a lot of talk about food in the story. Needless to say, I kept getting hungry as I read.

I don’t normally think of a celebrity-romance going along with a small-town-romance, but it works well here. The main character, Chelsea Boudreaux moves back to her hometown, Duchesne, Louisiana to film her cooking show for The Food TV network. This is her first time as the main chef in front of the cameras, and she wants to showcase her Cajun and Creole recipes in a modern kitchen in her own home. On the way to Duchesne, Chelsea gets a flat tire, and a handsome guy in a blue pickup stops to help her. Bryce Cormier was a classmate of Chelsea’s in school but she doesn’t recognize him immediately since he transitioned after she left town. There is an attraction between the two that only grows as they get to know each other again, but will they be able to fit their very different lives together long term?

Bryce is not a new character for me. I remember him as an important secondary character in Ms. Rey’s novel You Again. Several other characters from that book show up here as well. I do enjoy revisiting old friends in other stories like this.
The setting (and the food) almost made this Southern girl homesick. The author did a great job creating characters that reflect the quirks and idiosyncrasies you might find in a small Southern town like Duchesne. Chelsea and Bryce are very likeable characters and work well together as a couple. I also loved how the author showed Chelsea as a person who has grown to be positive about her body shape and size.

I had a lot of fun visiting old friends from a former book, reliving some of my Southern small town memories, and seeing another lovely couple have a HEA story. I think you might enjoy this novel as much as I did.

I received an ARC from NetGalley and Bold Strokes Books for an honest review.
Profile Image for Cherie.
594 reviews1 follower
May 9, 2023
2.5 stars

This is a story about Chelsea Boudreaux who is a chef on a Food tv show. She has recently moved back to her hometown of Duchesne, LA. Chelsea went to culinary school in the northeast and lived and worked in NYC for her same tv network. Now she’s been offered her own show and she’s very happy. Chelsea has battled her weight her whole life and feels that her mother looks down on her for being overweight. Bryce Cormier is a trans man, who began transitioning at 19. Bryce works at a nearby university and is happy with his life but looking for a long term relationship.

Chelsea and Bryce went to high school together in Duchesne, so when they meet up for the first tine they each recognize the other. They begin a slow friendship that turns into a romance and an HEA.

I have mixed feelings on this book. I liked the premise and the setting. I enjoyed reading a book with a trans man in it. I would have liked it a lot more with several changes:
-more angst
- more emotion and background on Chelsea’s weight issues and hang ups. And her relationship with her mother.
-more emotion, thought process and background on Bryce’s decision to transition. His family supported him 100% which was great. I would have liked to know more of his teenage thoughts.
-And a completely different cover that represented a curvy chef. I’m thinking Rachael Ray or Ina Garten. It’s a little sus to me for any super skinny chef to exist, hopefully chefs taste test their own cooking!

ARC received from Net Galley for a voluntary and honest review.
Profile Image for Agirlcandream.
744 reviews3 followers
July 4, 2023
Chelsea Boudreau returns to her childhood home of Duschene, Louisiana as the star chef of a new cooking show featuring Cajun cuisine. While excited to step into the limelight for the first time, her memories of her judgemental mother and a flat tire in the middle of nowhere have Chelsea wondering if leaving the city was such a great idea. When a handsome stranger named Bryce stops to offer her assistance, memories of an old friendship are rekindled along with a new found attraction.

I enjoyed this light hearted romance with an underlying theme of acceptance and celebration of living an authentic life with the one you love. Their chemistry together was tender and romantic. I appreciated their open communication, giving the reader a better understanding of Bryce’s life as a trans man, his challenges and his pleasures. As much as the story is centered around Chelsea’s new life, I kept coming back to Bryce just wanting to be accepted without being singled out as other. The author did a wonderful job
of educating while storytelling.

I was surprised to see all the negative reviews, many focusing on the poor cover design when Chelsea is a full figured chef with a body positive outlook. The cover could have been better but doesn’t take away from the story. Then I wondered if people were having trouble connecting with Chelsea and Bryce as a couple. Whatever the reasons, I found this a sweet and memorable romance.

Well done Aurora Rey.

A copy of this novel was received with thanks from Bold Strokes Books via NetGalley for review.

4.4 stars
Profile Image for Aleana.
687 reviews20 followers
April 26, 2023
Chelsea had little confidence because of overbearing mother who puts her down. She gets a chance after a scandal to show her mother that she is a success when she gets a chance to film her Southern cooking in her hometown Duchesne, Louisiana. Bryce is a college academic advisor who loves his family and hometown and I love that this is a character from a previous book that I was hoping will get a story it’s nice to see the author gave him his own love story. This was such a sweet romance with little angst I enjoy the characters Chelsea and Bryce have sweets moments I like that Chelsea friend Jada help her see she had everything in her reach enjoy the cooking aspect.

I received an ARC copy of this book from the Publisher via Netgalley and voluntarily leaving my review.
Profile Image for Kaye.
4,067 reviews66 followers
May 2, 2023
This has strong pluses for me going into it. It is a stand alone sequel to You Again featuring two of my favorite Rey characters, Kate and her precocious daughter Harper. Kate’s brother Bryce (who appeared in You Again) is a trans guy and works as an academic advisor at a nearby college. He loves small town country living and is especially tied to the community that supported his transistion including his sister and extended family. Chelsea Boudreaux left town for culinary school. She is returning 15 years later to Duchesne, Louisiana and is getting to host her own Food Network cooking show. She describes herself as fat, queer and femme. It is her brand and style.

I liked the characters and their diversity. But their interactions seem more lust driven than romance. They are intimate fairly early without expectations of feelings. I love the cooking show aspect of the story but Chelsea’s past needs some work. I’m not sure what brought her back to her home town. She doesn’t have any friends or previous connections only her judgmental mother. I get there can’t be any flash backs to high school because that would have been pre-transition for Bryce but I’m still missing the draw for her. Bryce is a simpler character, very sweet and people pleasing. And the banter and conversations between the couple are honest and fun. But there were times I was waiting for something to happen to make things more interesting.

I was happy to return to Duchesne and if the author wants to write another book about Madison (or other characters) I’m going to line up to read it. This one just didn’t tick all my boxes. Also hate to be negative about a cute cover. But if the character is proudly fat, why isn’t that depicted on the cover as well. Thank you to NetGalley and Bold Strokes Books for the ARC and I am leaving a voluntary review.
Profile Image for Sharon.
23 reviews5 followers
May 13, 2023
Chelsea Boudreaux, a food tv show host, recently acquired her own tv show. She meets Bryce Cormier, an academic advisor, when she returned to her hometown in Duchesne to set up stage for her new tv show. Both went to school together but things have changed since school days. Bryce is now a trans guy, having transitioned at the end of high school and Chelsea left Duchesne for culinary school and to escape. Now she’s back and is starting to be famous with her new TV show. There is also the start of new romance between them. The question is: Can Bryce come to terms with dating someone famous and being in the limelight himself? And will Chelsea be contented staying in her hometown, the place that she left after high school?

I have to admit that I was slightly disappointed with the story initially. I felt that the attraction between the MCs was too quick (likely based on looks) and they lusted over each other rather than having an initial true connection. This sort of instant attraction usually is okay for me but for reasons I can’t explain, I didn’t feel it this time. The story got better in the second half of the book. I liked that it featured a trans guy character and Bryce is really sweet.

A possible small matter but the cover sort of did not reflect the chef in the book who was a plus size woman. It was a really good cover though. Caught my eye immediately. This book is the second book of a series, but is definitely a standalone as I have not read the first book, You Again. A low angst read…and it was a 3 star read for me.

I received an ARC from the publisher through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Carol Hutchinson.
1,038 reviews73 followers
July 12, 2023
Lovely!

Chelsea returns to the small town she calls home, proud to have secured her own cooking show. Bryce, a trans guy who has never left the town never thought he’d fall in love until running into Chelsea. It’s only when Chelsea celebrity status starts to interfere with the simple relationship he thought they’d found, he has to find the courage to continue the relationship.

Much like the relationship between Chelsea and Bryce, this story is both simple and complex. Chelsea had such ambition and dreams, but what she shared with Bryce was magical and something she was desperate not to lose. Bryce was already dealing with so much, finding his way with Chelsea in a new relationship and struggling with the fascination that seemed to follow their relationship because of one appearance on her show.

Between them there were many challenges they had to deal with both personally and together. The most magical moments came when they spent time alone. It was relaxed, no pressure, and two unlikely people just made a perfect pairing that would only grow into something more spectacular the closer they became. It was so interesting to explore a story with a transgender character like Bryce. He was such a simple, kind, gentle soul who just wanted to fall in love. I was so pleased when he found this with Chelsea and just prayed they’d make it through any doubt that started to creep in when Bryce soul searched whether he was happy with the way he was portrayed by those outside of their relationship.

A very lovely story of understanding, compromise, and respect for preferences and personal feelings. I really enjoyed the story and hope Bryce and Chelsea will feature in future stories because they are so sweet together!
Profile Image for MC Johnson.
Author4 books30 followers
April 10, 2023
If you're looking for a low-angst romance that showcases what a well-written relationship should look like, then give this book a read! I promise you will not be disappointed.

Full stop; I loved this book! Aurora Rey made Chelsea and Bryce's relationship believable and well thought out. There were many parts of the book where I paused and crossed my fingers, hoping she didn't go for the easy drama, and I'm so glad that she didn't!! I loathe books that go for the easy drama because they believe it adds more to the plot. For me, it just makes me was to quit the book (unless it fits the characters, YA/New Adult books get a bit of a pass, but I digress)

I LOVED the Trans rep and inclusion in the book! There was no "we don't like you because you're not a real man," and I loved that! I appreciate that Aurora went for other ways to increase the drama. I felt like the sources of angst and friction were believable. I know I've basically restated my praise a few different ways, but I truly appreciate that Aurora wrote two very well-rounded and convincing characters.

On top of all of that, it was amazing to see Jada, Chelsea's friend co-worker, help Chelsea see that what she wanted was already within her reach. Wanting the next big thing wouldn't change the amazing thing she already had. In fact, reaching for more and more would only make her lose everything.

I want to give Aurora Rey all of the stars! Even more, if they get Lori Prince or Avery Caris as the voice actors if/when they release the audiobook.

Before you go: I received this book as an ARC from Netgalley and Bold Strokes Books. I wrote this review voluntarily because, seriously, it was an amazing book. 😆

Overall rating:⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Characters: 5/5
Prose: 5/5
Plot: 5/5

Genre/Tropes:
Celebrity Chef romance
Showbusiness
Homing Romance
Bisexual MC
Trans Masc/FTM
Queer MF romance
Friends to lovers
Low angst
Family drama
Found family vibes
Profile Image for Frannie.
26 reviews4 followers
April 11, 2023
Chelsea Boudreaux is moving back to the small town she left to escape a fatphobic, overbearing mother on a wave of success - she is starring in her own cooking show featuring Southern cooking. Bryce, a college academic advisor and doting uncle, has his dream life in his beloved hometown, all except for his dream woman. This is the set up for Roux for Two, a soft, cozy romance.

I loved the mood and setting of this book, as well as the characters. I especially appreciated its exploration of themes about found-family and respecting boundaries in budding relationships. I liked how it took a dive into talking about navigating fame and public identity for queer and trans people, especially when it comes to media and marketing demands and how that affects relationships. The intimate scenes were hot and included nuance about queer and trans sex that is often lacking even in queer romance -- honestly, I was disappointed every time we faded to black instead of showing a full scene.

My main issue is that as much as I loved the characters, settings, and themes, I feel that the book lacked conflict in a way that drew me through to the end, especially after the characters got together. I felt that the action was predictable, so about 2/3rds of the way through I started to loose interest, which is why I give this 3.75 stars.
Profile Image for Meghan.
647 reviews11 followers
June 22, 2023
Wonderful

This book hit me in all the feels.

Chelsea is a chef who decided to move home to film her own cooking show as a queer, fat chef. I'm all about positive body image, but not a huge fan of the word fat.

Bryce is trans and never left his hometown. He rescues Chelsea from a flat tire and they go from friends to more fairly quickly. This was a feel good book that brought up a lot of issues that need to be addressed.

Wonderful job by Rey. Highly recommend 👌
Profile Image for Kim.
111 reviews
July 2, 2024
I read this pretty quickly because there just isn’t much to it. One of my friends told me they thought this was one of the best romances they’d read in a while, but I was left underwhelmed. It is about Chelsea, a chef on tv who has gotten her big break—because of some #metoo scandal at her foodTV job, she’s been promoted from the one who prepares all the food for the star to the star herself. And since she is queer, she runs her show very differently than her old boss—kinder and more inclusive. She decides to set the show in Louisiana where she is from, which necessitates a move back down South. She runs into Bryce, a trans man who helps her change her tire and they discover that they knew each other in high school before his transition. It was interesting to read a queer romance involving a trans person after so many FF romances but the writing was just kind of bleh. I imagine that if I tried to write a romance novel this is about what I would produce. It is just ok. The stakes don’t seem all that high, for one thing. Bryce is never really described as anything but good looking so you have no idea even how tall he is. He is so fucking mild and saintly that it’s hard to believe. He’s the most boring person ever. What does he do for fun besides go jogging and watch college football? Ugh. The banter is tedious, the jokes are lame, and the resolution comes too quickly because of the low stakes. I was just really bored the whole time. I still really hate small towns and this small town just doesn't exist in real life. These people aren't real. Chelsea is described as fat, but it never seems to be a problem for her. No one ever says anything disparaging about her other than her mom and it only takes ONE conversation with that woman to reverse a whole lifetime of fat shaming. 🙄Chelsea has no other problems. Bryce has no real problems. His big issue is that he has carved out a protected space for himself where he transitioned without any friction whatsoever, where his family is, and his boring little university counseling job, and he doesn't want to move. But rather than them talking about this as a defensive, self-protective behavior, it is supposedly a good thing. He is a "good ole boy" with a heart of gold. Yeah, right. This is all fake. It all feels so fake. So, good premise, great trans representation, boring execution. I am glad my friend really loved the book but I honestly don't understand why.
Profile Image for Pamela.
907 reviews7 followers
March 30, 2023
Rey has written a straight romance under the guise of it being a lesbian romance because one of the main characters is bisexual and the other is a transexual man. Readers may be shocked that a penis is involved in a romance published by Bold Strokes Books and written by a popular and prolific LesFic author. After all is said and done, though, this is an enjoyable romance.

The setting is rather nebulous and amorphous because, although Rey tells us the small town that the main character returns to is in southern Louisiana, she doesn’t make the town an integral part of the book. Readers will set the book down after finishing it without having a feeling for what living there as is really like aside from Rey telling readers it’s a friendly town.

The two main characters are less well-drawn than many of Rey’s other characters, but Chelsea, a celebrity chef, is better drawn than Bryce, her boyfriend. Through all the twists and turns of Chelsea’s career changes over the course of this book, readers will root for her � and then - to succeed.

The story gives readers enough details about television cooking shows to surprise her readers who will come away from the book with more knowledge than when they began the book. Those readers who are not fans of cooking shows may, after reading this book, find themselves intrigued enough by what they learned to seek out a couple of shows to watch. At the end of the book, Chelsea makes a decision that will stun readers because Rey didn’t even hint at its possibility throughout the rest of the story.

Readers should set aside their expectations that this will be another of Rey’s standard romances. It is anything but. They should also be willing to set aside their previously held beliefs (and prejudices) to read this book and judge it for what it is � a sweet romance between two people who have the fortitude to live their authentic lives.

My thanks to Bold Strokes Books for an eARC.
550 reviews14 followers
April 8, 2023
When Chelsea Boudreaux lost her job she thought her days of working in tv were over. Being a suze chef for the star Chef wasn’t that great but when the show ended Chelsea was offered her own show. When she’d left her hometown years ago she felt it was time to return, taping her show from her own kitchen. On the plus side, probably no one will remember her. She left right after she graduated high school. To visit with her mother while there wasn’t something she was looking forward to. Her mother turned her back and used anytime together to put Chelsea down. became someone.
Bryce Cormier has lived in Duchesne all his life, leaving for college but when he got his degree he found the perfect job at the University, helping students settle into campus life. His job was close enough it enabled him to live in the same small town he grew up in. Some would think he’d be more comfortable living elsewhere after he had his surgery (woman-man). But for Bryce it was an easy decision. It’s where his family also lived.
Now Chelsea is back and when she accepts Bryce for who he is, Bryce couldn't be happier. Lets hope the show is a hit. Ms Rey gives us a look at what life is like for trans people, especially with the laws being enacted to quash the ‘trans life is like. Easy read with great characters, supporting cast and a really interesting story line. Very enjoyable read.
ARC via NetGalley/ Bold Stroke Books
Profile Image for Faith Catherine.
158 reviews8 followers
May 5, 2023
Thank you to NetGalley and Bold Strokes Books for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.

This is a sweet slice of life style book about a chef who moves back to her hometown to launch a cooking show and falls in love with a transgender man who she knew pre transition in high school. This is a standalone sequel in a series, though you don't have to read the first book first- I haven't read the first book and was able to follow everything.

I love that this book shows a queer couple in the deep south who are out, proud, and supportive. I loved that both their romance arc, and the plot outside the relationship were fairly low stakes. The book really is following their life through the first few months of their relationship, hence the "slice of life" comparison.

There were some moments of the story that felt rushed and glossed over- for instance, the FMC returns from a trip were both parties were anxious about her return, yet their reunion was skipped and we went to the next week. There were some other instances like this, where an upcoming event was mentioned then completely skipped. It really felt like the town could have been fleshed out a bit more as well. However, this book is a standalone in a series, so maybe the setting was developed more in the first book.
36 reviews
May 8, 2023
Get ready to meet Chelsea, a chef who’s finally landed her own cooking show and moves back to her small home town in Duchesne to shoot it. It’s here she runs into Bryce, a trans guy she’d known of from high school who is an academic advisor at the local college.

I was so excited for the premise of the story - both with the food focus, and having great representation with a trans inclusive relationship.

I think for me, however, the book fell a little flat. I’ve thoroughly enjoyed Rey’s previous books, but something about this storyline just didn’t grab me. Everything felt a little easy with Chelsea and Bryce’s relationship - they kind of got together quick and that was that for the most part. Of course there was a little of the usual relationship drama, but it still felt a little lacking, and Bryce was a little bit of a super Mr. Nice Guy, on the edge of boring.

Also, I have to address the cover. I loved that this book featured a proud curvy chef; perhaps if the cover embraced the traits of the main character as well, it would enhance the message even further and feel more cohesive to the story.

Not a win for me, but a quick read none-the-less if you want a “quick and cosy�.

I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.
372 reviews15 followers
May 15, 2023
Sweet, queer m/f romance
I loved the premise and setting of this low-angst, sweet romance: The curvy girl (Chelsea) who fled home as soon as possible and comes back as a celebrity chef who pursues her career. She meets sweet home-body (trans-)male (Bryce) who wants to settle down. So inherent conflict between career and settling is guaranteed. And I loved the tongue-in-cheek male/female but by no means heterosexual vibe of the book. The setting is small-town Louisiana and it is fun to see the workings of small-town and Southern charm.
There is attraction and sexual tension from the get-go. The whole book is well-written. But there is a but: if you make a roux for gumbo don‘t forget to season well! Bryce is the total, absolute gentleman without faux except being a bit too nice. Chelsea all too easily settles for settling. The turn-about from affair to love-affair comes very late. So yes, a good, sweet read, but a pinch of salt is missing.
And really: Chelsea is all about curvy and the publisher puts the book out with a stick-figure on the cover? How is this promoting acceptance?

Thanks to netgalley and the publisher for the ARC. The review is left voluntarily.
Profile Image for Erin.
939 reviews18 followers
April 14, 2023
Aspiring TV chef Chelsea is moving back to her small Louisiana hometown when her car gets a flat tire. The handsome man in the pickup who stops to help her turns out to be Bryce, local hero and certified romantic. The two strike up a friendship as Chelsea gets her new show off the ground, and quickly realize their mutual attraction may be something more.

This was a lovely book about finding someone who accepts and celebrates you for who you are. My main quibble was with how fast the relationship moved, especially when the new couple were faced with a decision that seemed way too soon for them to even consider.

Also, the cover art does not represent the book. Chelsea is proudly fat, so why is there a Barbie-thin silhouette gracing the cover of this book? I don’t expect cover models to look exactly like the characters, but surely it’s possible to illustrate a woman who slightly resembles the amazing Chelsea.

Thanks to Netgalley, the publisher, and the author for the ARC to review. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Joyfully Jay.
8,659 reviews496 followers
May 29, 2023
A review.

3.5 stars


Bryce, as a character, is a dreamer. Big hearted, romantic, gregarious, and good-natured, he’s never felt the need to leave home and go anywhere else. He has a supportive family, co-workers, friends, and community who have never made him feel unwelcome or othered by his transition. He’s also very frank about his interest in finding love, his many partners, and his eventual desire to settle down and have a family. So when Chelsea meets him on his own ground, flirting back just as hard, is it any wonder Bryce falls � and hard? She’s lovely, she’s bold, she’s got her own career and her own dreams, and Bryce is able to help make them come true � mostly by installing lightbulbs, since Chelsea is afraid of heights. But he’s willing to get on any step stool she puts in front of him.

Read Elizabeth’s review in its entirety .
Profile Image for Ashlee.
307 reviews22 followers
April 23, 2023
Sorry to say this was not my favorite book by Aurora Rey. I liked the two MCs and the premise seemed interesting but the story just didn't hold my interest. The sex scenes were pretty spicy and I liked to see the trans and curvy lady representations. Beyond that the interactions of the MCs just were surface level and there's no real talk of feelings until 80% into the book. Their scenes together seem rushed to me and feel incomplete and I just didn't feel the evolution of their relationship. It was an ok read though but wasn't quite to the level I have seen from Rey in the past.
I will say that I wish the cover was more representative of Chelsea. It's great to see a bit of diversity in the book and I love the cover itself but it doesn't feel like a good depiction of the character it's meant to represent.
Overall it was an ok if boring read but I'll continue to look out for future books by Rey because I've definitely enjoyed her past releases.
155 reviews
May 11, 2023
I absolutely loved this book. Not because I love cooking shows or because I can relate as a curvy girl myself but because she gave us all hope of a happy ending.
Chelsea gets her big shot after a celebrity chef is involved in a scandal. She is going back to her hometown, bought a house and is going to have her own show out of her house. That means the best appliances that money can buy.
She has car trouble on the way and is helped by a handsome young man Bryce that looks familiar. Chelsea finds out he is trans and she knew her in school. They become quick friends that turns into lovers. Bryce has a large family, and I already knew some on the characters from a previous book called You Again featuring Kate, Sutton and their daughter. Chelsea is welcomed into the family with open arms.
I have not read many books with trans characters and thought that Ms Rey handled the subject very well.
875 reviews5 followers
June 5, 2023
Becoming one of my favourite authors for the way that she builds characters with complex emotions and internal thoughts, not often seen in queer fiction. I loved this book as well because it's central couple are a queer fat femme and a trans man, again not seen enough in queer fiction. Chelsea is returning home to small town Louisiana to star in her own cooking show centred on Cajun food, yum. Early in the book she is rescued from the side of the road by Bryce who works in the local college and so the fun begins. Their attraction is immediate and very hot. I really enjoyed watching the development of the relationship without some of the usual tropes of romantic fiction, no big falling out but careful, slow building of connection. I also really liked Bryce's family, especially the fun sibling sparks between him and his sister Kate and her daughter Hunter is fun too. Wonderful read.

With thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Andj.
31 reviews2 followers
April 22, 2023
We love a book with LGBTQIA rep!

This book was the perfect small town vibe. I'm not usually a fan of the insta-love sort of trope, but I feel that these characters really worked to end up together. They had their own obstacles to overcome before they could really commit to one another and I appreciate the authenticity of that story line. Seeing Chelsea get more confident in her own skin with Bryce's help was really sweet, and I feel like her insecurities hit home for a lot of people. The conflict with her mother, her views on her appearance and her general lack of confidence in herself are all incredibly relatable and I think these point were all addressed well throughout the story.

The romance plot was sweet, I loved the cooking show aspect of things and all the secondary characters just melted my heart. Definitely recommend!
Profile Image for rori ୨୧.
236 reviews
April 16, 2023
Thank you to NetGalley and Bold Strokes Books for providing me with this ARC, however all opinions are my own.

Now, in terms of the representation, I loved Roux for Two. Every character had such an energy to them and nobody was ever othered.

However, I feel like that’s all that Roux for Two had going for it. I finished this book a few hours ago and somehow forgot the characters names already?? This book was fun, don’t get me wrong, it just wasn’t memorable at all.

They got together too early in the book imo. There was NO pining, no angst. I love a light and fluffy romance as much as anyone, but this book had nothing else going for it.

Harper was my favourite character though. She was an absolute icon.

⭐️⭐️⭐️
Profile Image for Walter Underwood.
387 reviews34 followers
June 5, 2023
This is so relentlessly pleasant that it isn't really all that engaging. Everything goes right for these two lovely people. The End.

And what is with the skinny girl on the cover? Did the artist not get the memo about the curvy main character?

I do wish the food had a bigger role. We know that the first episode of her show is étouffée, but what kind? Chicken, like I make from the Commander's Palace cookbook? Shrimp, crawfish? And just "gumbo", again, what goes in it? There are so many local varieties. What happened to the episode with her mom, setting that up was a huge deal, but if shooting the episode was in the book, I missed it. I expected some sort of drama there, plus I wanted to know more about that strawberry and fig jam, a peculiar combination. So many seeds.
Profile Image for Victoria Janssen.
Author35 books98 followers
February 10, 2024
Roux for Two by Aurora Rey was a cute, lowkey contemporary romance between a fat queer femme and a trans man. Chef Chelsea Boudreaux has just gotten her own show, which will be filmed in the small south Louisiana town she left behind; her career is about to take off and take her places. College academic advisor Bryce Cormier has lived in the same town with his loving family for his whole life and never plans to move anywhere else; he longs for a partner and, eventually, children. Their unspoken high school crushes are revived when Chelsea comes back to town, and friendship turns to attraction turns to a red-hot relationship. Conflict arises, of course, but it's gentle and resolved by the characters using their words. I enjoyed this a lot and would read more by this author.
Profile Image for Marquie.
28 reviews
May 6, 2023
Couldn’t wait for the audio.. broke down and purchased via Bold Stroke. You Again is one of my favorite books and couldn’t wait another day to see what Kate, Sutton and Harper have been up to. Loved they were featured throughout this book. Bryce and Chelsea were a perfect fit. Enjoyed reading the relationship blossom. This was a good weekend read. Maybe Jada will get her own book to keep this orbit going. another enjoyable story by Aurora Rey and I’m hoping Keira Grace will be tapped for the audio.
87 reviews3 followers
May 21, 2023
Roux for Two is a well-written novel. It is nice to see Aurora Rey writing not only a trans male character but also a woman explicitly curvy (which the cover does not show, by the way). If in her last books Mrs. Rey used upstate NY as her setting, now she takes us to a small town in Louisiana and I always like to read books that get out of a crazy city. This book does not have much conflict, but I liked how they could solve the problems that came up when they decided to talk to each other, It made the characters more real.
Profile Image for Tina.
Author2 books35 followers
April 28, 2023
I really enjoyed Roux for Two.
I laughed, I learned things and I said "aw" mentally, a lot.
This was my first romance with a trans character as a love interest and it was fantastic.
It was written with sensitivity and fun, hot scenes and cute kids.
Super sweet, low angst and easy to read.
The only thing that could have made it better is if there were some of Chelsea's recipes included.
I received an advance copy from NetGalley and all opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Kady.
672 reviews1 follower
June 20, 2023
As much as I always enjoy when an author has a stand alone set in the same universe as other books, this one was just fine. I loved the trans and curvy girl representation in this (although the cover selection makes me a bit ick). The main issue in their relationship was so avoidable had they had a conversation a bit earlier in the book, and it felt like every conflict was solved so quickly and easily. Wasn't mad at this book, but didn't fawn over it either.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 39 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.