Jess—aka Reviews by Jess—is a sassy, top-ranked Goodreads reviewer who reads a little of everything. From steamy romance to dark fantasy, plus stories featuring mental health, hidden disabilities, and LGBTQ+ rep, she brings bold, unfiltered reviews readers can trust. Expect sass, sparkle, and a TBR that’s about to explode.

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Monday, March 2, 2026

Review: Hammered

 

Hammered by Jasinda Wilder

Genre: Contemporary Romance
Rating: ⭐⭐ (2 stars — strong premise, weak emotional payoff)

Tagline:
He fixed her house—but not the story’s foundation.


🔨❤️ Tropes & Story Elements

• Contemporary Romance
• Blue Collar Hero
• Divorce Recovery
• Fixer Upper Romance
• Instalust
• Emotional Healing Attempt
• Older FMC


⚠️ Content & Trigger Warnings

• Divorce and betrayal
• Emotional vulnerability
• Sexual content
• Power imbalance themes

(Emotionally centered on recovery after betrayal.)

🩸 Full Thoughts

Hammered starts with a premise that feels primed for emotional depth: a woman rebuilding her life after betrayal and a contractor who enters her world to repair more than just broken walls. On paper, it has everything needed for a layered, healing-focused romance.

Unfortunately, while the setup is promising, the execution never quite builds the emotional structure needed to support it.

🖤 A Foundation with Potential

The heroine’s post-divorce vulnerability offers strong narrative potential. Betrayal, loss of trust, and the daunting process of starting over could have formed the backbone of a deeply resonant emotional arc.

There are moments where that vulnerability surfaces, but they’re brief and often overshadowed by the rapid shift into attraction. The story gestures toward healing without fully exploring the messiness that makes healing meaningful.

The emotional rebuilding feels more implied than earned.

💪 The Blue Collar Hero

Jesse fits the dependable, capable hero archetype well. He’s steady, confident, and comfortable in his role as protector and fixer. The fixer-upper metaphor—repairing a house while emotional wounds linger—has clear symbolic potential.

But much like the emotional arc, that symbolism remains mostly surface-level. The connection between physical rebuilding and internal growth is present but not deeply examined.

🔥 Instalust & Pacing Issues

The chemistry between the characters is immediate—almost too immediate. Attraction moves quickly into attachment, and the emotional leap from loneliness to dependency feels rushed.

Instead of a slow, layered evolution of trust, the relationship accelerates through physical intimacy and comfort without fully unpacking the heroine’s emotional baggage. As a result, the romance feels more reactive than transformative.

There isn’t enough friction or introspection to make the resolution feel earned.

⚖️ Why It Fell Short

What keeps Hammered at two stars is not lack of potential—it’s lack of depth.

• The divorce recovery arc feels underdeveloped.
• Emotional wounds aren’t examined long enough to create catharsis.
• Conflict resolves too easily to feel meaningful.

Readers looking for a lighter, fast-moving romance may find enjoyment here, but those seeking emotional weight and a fully realized healing journey may feel something is missing.

🖤 Final Thoughts

Hammered presents a relatable concept and a comforting hero, but the emotional structure never fully solidifies. The bones of a powerful story are there—it just needed more time, tension, and depth to make the romance truly resonate.

Two stars for the premise and moments of promise, even if the foundation didn’t hold.

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