Book Club Monday: The Other Side of Now


AuthorPaige Harbison Title: The Other Side of Now Publisher: St. Martin's Press Date Published: 06/03/2025

Read Dates: 04/08/2026- 04/13/2026
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

This was my family book club pick for April.


The Other Side of Now is a single POV magical realism fiction. It centers on Meg, who has achieved her dream of becoming a famous actress in LA but is feeling unfulfilled. She books a spur-of-the-moment trip to a small town in Ireland that she once dreamed of moving to. When she gets there, the townspeople all seem to know her by her given name instead of her stage name, the face looking back on the mirror is her pre-plastic surgery face, and her childhood best friend Aimee, who died as a teenager, is alive and well (and apparently feuding with Meg!) Meg doesn’t know how she slipped into another life, but she’s determined to keep it, and to reconcile with Aimee to fully embrace this second chance!

I am so glad I got to read this one! I was intrigued by the synopsis and it turned out even better than I was expecting. I loved the side characters (especially Keira and Cillian), loved the charming small town, and loved Meg’s growth and determination to make the most of time with her friend. It had a fun romantic storyline, it wasn’t a romance, was definitely more a story about friendship and grieving. Beautifully done, I will definitely look for more from this author.


With a leading role on a hit TV show and a relationship with Hollywood's latest heartthrob, Meg Bryan appears to have everything she ever wanted. But underneath the layers of makeup and hairspray, her happiness is as fake as her stage name, Lana Lord. Following a small breakdown at her thirtieth birthday party, she books an impromptu trip where she knows the grass is greener: Ireland. Specifically, the quaint little village where she and her best friend Aimee always dreamt of moving—a dream that fell apart when an accident claimed Aimee’s life a decade ago.

When Meg arrives, the people in town are so nice, treating her not as a stranger, but a friend. Except for the (extremely hot) bartender giving her the cold shoulder. Meg writes it all off as jetlag until she looks in the mirror. Her hair is no longer bleached within an inch of its life, her skin has a few natural fine lines, and her nose looks like… well, her old nose. Her real nose.

Her phone reveals hundreds of pictures of her life in this little town: with an adorable dog she doesn’t know; with the bartender who might be her (ex?) boyfriend; and at a retail job unrelated to acting. Eventually, she comes to accept that she somehow made a quantum slide into an alternate version of her life. But the most shocking realization of all? In this life, her best friend Aimee is alive and well…but wants nothing to do with Meg.

Despite her bewilderment, Meg is clear-eyed about one thing: this is a once-in-a-lifetime chance to reconnect with her friend and repair what she broke. She finagles an opportunity to act in the play Aimee is writing and directing and as the project unfolds, Meg realizes that events as she remembers them may not be the only truth, and that an impossible choice looms before her.

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