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Back to Start: Love Changes the Heart

By Sunshine Rodgers

Price:  
$19.99

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Back to Start: Love Changes the Heartย by Sunshine Rodgers is a heartwarming and inspiring novel that delves into the transformative power of love and friendship. Follow Erin Melrose, a dedicated corporate professional, as she navigates the challenges and triumphs of her career at Garrison Board Games. Through the laughter, tears, and genuine connections she forms with her team, Erin discovers the true meaning of happiness and fulfillment. With the support of her loving boyfriend, Travis, and a newfound sense of purpose, Erin embarks on a journey of self-discovery and personal growth. This captivating story reminds us that sometimes the most significant changes begin with a single act of love and kindness.

Availability

available

Publish Date

2025-08-25

Published Year

2025

Publisher Name

ISBN 13

979-8869266453

ASIN

B0FNSZ16VG

Format

Paperback

Language

English

Screen Reader

supported

Enhanced Typesetting

Enabled

Word Wise

Enabled

Print Length

170

Average Ratings

Readers Feedback

Resetting the board – Review for Back to Start: Love Changes the Heart by Sunshine Rodgers

This is a clean, office-set romcom about an ambitious accountant, Erin Melrose, sent to assess a faded satellite unit of Garrison Board Games and nudged...Read More

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Resetting the board – Review for Back to Start: Love Changes the Heart by Sunshine Rodgers

This is a clean, office-set romcom about an ambitious accountant, Erin Melrose, sent to assess a faded satellite unit of Garrison Board Games and nudged toward a kinder idea of success. The corporate open sets the context crisply. Erin is a decade into the ladder, angling for promotion, and told to find savings in a culture that has grown brittle. The board-game motif is established early and returns as a running device. Go back to start is not only a card prompt. It is the thesis.

Strengths. The annex crew deliver warm found-family energy that gradually softens Erin. The in-text photo wall and the recurring tag Family Photos At Work embody the theme of work as community. A late scene frames morale, not only money, as the companyโ€™s deeper problem, which gives Erin a credible pivot in outlook. Readers who want wholesome beats will appreciate the gentle date scenes and the PG register.

Craft and execution. Prose is clear and serviceable, with brisk scene work and straightforward internal monologue. The workplace contrast is painted in broad strokes. Corporate is marble and rules. The annex is messy and human. That clarity helps pace, but sometimes flattens nuance. Antagonists read archetypal, which softens jeopardy. The humour leans on repeated maths puns and office gags. A lighter touch or greater variety would lift re-read value.

Structure and pacing. The set-up lands cleanly. The middle stacks similar beats of culture clash and annex hijinks, which can blur. The final movement circles back to the title concept and articulates Erinโ€™s values in the boardroom, an on-theme close that prioritises tone over tension.

Characterisation. Erinโ€™s arc from insulated efficiency to engaged teammate is readable and coherent. Travis functions as a supportive anchor rather than a source of conflict, keeping the romance low heat by design. Side characters carry the comic business and supply the found-family notes the book promises.

Paratext. The PDF is tidy, with chaptering and back matter that foregrounds the authorโ€™s Christian inspiration and a social hashtag that mirrors the in-world wall of photos. The faith emphasis lies mainly in the acknowledgements rather than in the overt plot, broadening the audience fit.

Verdict. Warm and sincere, with a clear motif and gentle humour. Soft stakes and repetitive jokes cap its ceiling, yet it will satisfy readers seeking a wholesome workplace uplift.

Summary Review

Back to Start: Love Changes the Heart is a clean workplace romcom that does what it says on the tin. Erin Melrose, a promotion minded accountant at Garrison Board Games, is sent to a shabby annex to tighten budgets and instead finds a rough and ready team who treat work like family. The board game motif is neat and on theme, with the idea of going back to start mirroring Erinโ€™s reset in values. The prose is clear, the scenes move briskly, and the tone stays PG throughout. The strengths are warmth, an easy found family vibe, and a romance that supports rather than overwhelms Erinโ€™s arc. The weaknesses are just as clear. Antagonists are painted in broad strokes, the middle act repeats a few culture clash beats, and the humour leans on the same maths and office gags once too often. Stakes remain soft, so tension never properly bites, but the book is sincere about kindness and purpose at work, and it lands its final note without strain. Readers who want a wholesome office uplift, light faith touch in the margins, and zero spice will be well served. Those seeking sharper conflict or surprise will likely want more.

Book reviewed:

Office maths, found family, and a second chance at joy – Review for Back to Start: Love Changes the Heart by Sunshine Rodgers

I breezed through this sweet office romcom and liked its simple promise: a numbers first high achiever lands in a messy satellite team and remembers...Read More

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Office maths, found family, and a second chance at joy – Review for Back to Start: Love Changes the Heart by Sunshine Rodgers

I breezed through this sweet office romcom and liked its simple promise: a numbers first high achiever lands in a messy satellite team and remembers why people matter. Erin Melrose walks into Garrison Board Games ready to tighten budgets and instead finds potlucks, in jokes, and a wall of photos that looks like a family fridge. The tone stays light, the prose is clear, and the board game idea ties it all together with a gentle reset theme.

What works best is the warmth. The Annex crew win you over, the running gags give sitcom pace, and Travis as boyfriend stays supportive in the background so Erinโ€™s growth can lead. On the flip side, the office villains are broad, a few maths jokes repeat, and the middle lingers on similar culture clash beats. Still, it lands on kindness and purpose without preaching, and it is fully clean: no violence, no heat, just feel good office stakes that resolve on theme.

Book reviewed:

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