For readers who devoured The Soulmate Equation and love a strong, skeptical heroine, Matched Hearts is poised to be your next favorite read. The novel introduces us to Dr. Ava Hartley , a brilliant, data-obsessed software engineer in her early thirties. After a devastating betrayal by her college sweetheart, Ava has sworn off “irrational romance.” She pours her energy into her startup’s flagship product: “Matched Hearts,” an AI-driven matchmaking app that boasts a 98% success rate based on hard neurochemical data, shared values, and lifestyle compatibility.
By: Romance Reads Weekly
The catch? Leo is also the best man at her sister’s wedding, and for the next four weeks, they are forced into a non-stop schedule of rehearsal dinners, venue walkthroughs, and floral arranging sessions. Nice excels at the slow-burn, enemies-to-lovers dynamic. The banter between Ava and Leo is razor-sharp without being cruel. Where Ava sees a reckless dreamer, Leo sees a woman afraid to feel. Where Leo sees a spontaneous road trip, Ava sees a logistical nightmare. matched hearts natasha nice
Matched Hearts is a smart, tender, and genuinely funny romance for the digital age. Natasha Nice has crafted a story that celebrates the beauty of imperfection and the undeniable truth that the best things in life—and love—often defy our most carefully constructed formulas. For readers who devoured The Soulmate Equation and
The novel also resists the urge to make Ava “change” completely. She doesn’t abandon her spreadsheets for a life of chaos. Instead, Matched Hearts argues for a middle ground—a love that respects both the data and the lightning strike. While the novel is a delight, the third act conflict feels slightly manufactured. A misunderstanding involving Leo’s ex-fiancée arrives a little too conveniently and resolves a bit too quickly. Furthermore, secondary characters like Ava’s sister, Chloe, are charming but underutilized; a subplot about Chloe’s own wedding jitters fades into the background by the final chapters. After a devastating betrayal by her college sweetheart,
Ava’s life is orderly, predictable, and exactly how she likes it. That is, until her board of directors insists she beta-test her own app to prove its efficacy to a major investor.
However, these are minor quibbles in an otherwise tightly plotted romance. 4.5/5 Stars