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Scrubby’s PBnJ

Scrubby’s PBnJ is best described as a small-town contemporary romance with a strong slice-of-life streak. It follows Brynn “Scrubby” Green, the owner of a niche sandwich shop in Indiana, as she tries to keep her business growing while navigating friendship, faith, self-doubt, and a slow-building romance with Dewey Huckleberry. The story moves through the rhythms of the restaurant, local events, family gatherings, and Brynn’s changing sense of herself, so the book is just as much about building a life as it is about falling in love.

I liked how committed the book is to ordinary life. It spends time on menus, cleanup, staffing, church, small-town festivals, and the thousand little decisions that make up a working life, and that gives the novel a grounded feel. It’s not trying to be sleek or ironic. It wants you to sit with these people and watch their days unfold. I liked that. The writing is plainspoken and earnest, and that honesty gives the story a certain charm. Sometimes conversations circle back to the same insecurities or values. Still, there is something refreshing about a novel that knows exactly what kind of world it wants to build and refuses to just hint at it.

I also found myself thinking about the author’s choices around Brynn. She’s written as someone who is capable, careful, and deeply sincere, but also very hard on herself. That combination gives the book its emotional center. Her romance with Dewey is tender in a way that feels intentionally old-fashioned, and the novel leans into that without apology. Same with the faith element. It’s not tucked into the background. It’s part of how Brynn sees the world, and whether a reader connects with that will probably shape how they respond to the whole book. For me, the strongest parts were not the biggest plot turns, but the quieter moments where Brynn slowly starts to believe she is worthy of love, success, and being seen clearly.

I came away thinking this is a warm, sincere read for people who enjoy character-driven fiction more than sharp plotting, and who don’t mind a story taking its time around everyday details. I would recommend it most to readers who like wholesome contemporary romance, small-town settings, food-centered fiction, and stories where emotional growth matters as much as the relationship itself. If you want a gentle novel with a steady heart, one that feels like spending time with familiar people in a place that slowly becomes home, Scrubby’s PBnJ has a lot to offer.

Pages: 533 | ASIN: B0FMPB2HNX

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