Nicolas Barreau's 3 best books

After carmen mola will be revealed as a group of three writers. The next thing may be that Nicolas Barreau, the renowned pseudonym of romance novels, may be a group of three writers. And then the controversy would tie on both sides and the matter would be settled. Although at the moment it points to a mere pseudonym exercise for a face and little else.

At the moment Nicolás Barreau surprises with an infernal rhythm of publications. Titles and titles that are appearing on the market as if it were a possessed spirit or an artificial intelligence capable of building romantic plots...

Finally, the judgment of the readers arrives and the validity of his works is ratified with that best-selling seal that ends up being translated into a diversity of languages. Pink stories with Paris as the epicenter where light and love come together with a much higher probability than anywhere else in the world. And it is that there are telluric forces like those of Paris that open souls and emotions towards the most unexpected, intense and vibrant loves...

Top 3 recommended novels by Nicolás Barreau

The coffee of little miracles


In this book The coffee of little miracles, this author shows why he has reached the top of the romance novel genre. Sometimes it seems as if the readers of romantics are easy types to conquer through honeyed, simple stories, of princes and princesses and splendorous endings.

But it shouldn't be that way when an author like Nicolas appears, turns the genre around, poses it as something else and thereby manages to drag readers with absolute force. What Nicolas has done in this book is to write about today's romances but with a touch of mystery. Its protagonist, Nelly, is an insecure young woman, the typical girl in whom a great inner world can be guessed, inhibited by fears and subjective conditions.

But thanks to that inner world, to that restlessness that ends up impelling her to move in any direction, this romantic story shoots towards paths more typical of that genre of mystery. Without a doubt, it is an interesting balance between a pink plot, with a touch of comedy, and an interesting enigma in which we are introduced thanks to a mimicry with Nelly.

But of course ... love. We cannot finally extract another main connotation from this story. Everything ends up moving by, for and towards love. What Nelly ends up discovering, the biggest enigma that will open up for her is being in love, she can find herself more comfortable with herself, enjoying caresses and kisses that, somehow, end up making us better.

The smile of women

In some romantic movie I remember seeing a bookstore called “Serendipity”. The matter pointed a bit to the same as what happens in this novel and that assails us with the idea of ​​a transformative reading not only for the protagonist who takes refuge from a rainy Paris in a book. Because you can also discover that city of light that is just waiting for the storm to subside...

In Paris, from time to time, it rains buckets and the north wind blows so strong that there seems to be nowhere to take shelter. Like when storms reach the heart and we don't know how or where to wait for it to clear.

For Aurélie, coincidences do not exist. One afternoon, sadder than ever, she takes refuge in a bookstore and a book. Nestled in her pages, her Aurélie finds the smile that she thought she had lost forever. And much more.

the time of cherries

Aurélie, the charming cook who runs the restaurant Le Temps des Cerises, in the Saint-Germain district of Paris, and André, a successful publisher and writer, have been a couple for a year. Valentine's Day is approaching, and with it the perfect date for a marriage proposal, but before André can ask the big question, something unexpected happens: Aurélie's small restaurant receives a Michelin star and the young cook cannot contain his joy… for three days.

The surprise that seemed to put the icing on the couple's happiness was just the result of a mix-up. And when Aurélie meets the true recipient of the distinction, chef Jean-Marie Marronnier, who not only cooks like the gods but also has a real Monet hanging in his restaurant, things get even more complicated...

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