Pages: 464
Genre: Adult Fiction
Pub. Date: June 23, 2026
Publisher: Ballantine
Source: Publisher for review
Other Books By Author: A Hundred Summers,
My Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
Goodreads says, "Local history insists that a legendary pirate buried his treasure somewhere beneath Windward, the decayed Cooper estate on Winthrop Island, but Lucy Cooper never trusted the fable that broke her family apart. When a widowed Lucy returns with her young daughter to grieve her estranged father, she discovers the property’s buried under a mountain of debt, and Ben Ressler has just turned up on her doorstep.
Thirteen summers ago, a teenaged Lucy never meant to fall in love with Ben, a Dartmouth football star vacationing next door at the Peabody estate, and the object of an all-consuming crush by Laura Peabody, Lucy’s best friend. Those two weeks with Ben were the best and worst of Lucy’s life, dooming her friendship with Laura. Now Ben’s returned to live quietly in the Peabodys’ caretaker lodge, after a fatal accident ended his dazzling NFL career. He’s also the last person who saw Lucy’s father alive.
As Lucy reconstructs her father’s troubling final days, she uncovers his research on the frozen winter of 1717, when a desperately wounded pirate sought refuge on Winthrop Island with an enigmatic healer. To Lucy, this history points the way to a different kind of how to forgive yourself for the mistakes of the past and earn a second chance at love. But just as Lucy’s long-buried emotions sear to the surface, a shocking turn of events reveals that someone else on the island will do whatever it takes to claim the fabled plunder.
A timeless story of love and atonement, When You Loved Me maps both a centuries-old treasure hunt and the intimate territory of the human heart, weaving together past and present as only Beatriz Williams can."
I really enjoyed Lucy from the start of When You Loved Me. She has had a difficult time after her husband's death and now must sort out her father's death and his house on her own while raising her precocious daughter. She takes a teaching job on the island and falls into the everyday routine on Winthrop. Except things aren't going smoothly with trying to sell her dad's house; plus, there are the clues he has left behind that start her thinking about an actual treasure. Also, the slow-burn, second-chance romance between Ben and Lucy was so very well done. I really enjoyed it, and the flashbacks to their first summer together further illustrated their romance and backstory.
As always, Williams does a wonderful job developing Winthrop Island; it was very atmospheric, and the pirate treasure only added to that feeling. Fans of her previous novels might remember a few characters who show up in When You Loved Me, which I appreciated.
My only issue with When You Loved Me was the flashback to 1717 and the story involving Hephzibah and pirate Ramsay. At first, it was really jarring as I didn't feel it meshed very well with the story in both style and pacing. I almost wanted to skim it to get back to Lucy and Ben's story, but I knew that Williams would bring it all together. And she did! So be forewarned, the 1717 subplot is a slow start, but keep with it.
I love a good second-chance romance, and Williams delivers with When You Loved Me. Let me know in the comments if you plan to read When You Loved Me this summer and if you are a fan of Beatriz Williams.


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