Format: E-Book
Read with: Kindle Oasis
Length: Novel
Genre: Contemporary Romance
POV: First Person, Dual
Series: Daydreamer, #3
Publisher: Self-Published
Hero: Mike Mayweather
Heroine: Victoria Russell
Sensuality: 🔥🔥🔥
Published On: August 12, 2025
Started On: August 17, 2025
Finished On: August 23, 2025

Outlier by Susie Tate is one of those stories that quietly creeps up on you; tender, unexpected, and deeply human. The third installment in the Daydreamer series, it brings together a neurodivergent heroine and a gruff, working-class hero in a story that is as much about healing and understanding as it is about love.
Vicky is unlike any heroine I have come across in a while; brilliant, blunt, and heartbreakingly misunderstood. Living with autism, she has spent most of her life being labelled “weird,” her social awkwardness and emotional honesty leaving her isolated even among those who should have loved her best. Her maternal family life is a masterclass in toxicity, with a manipulative mother and a sister who feeds off her insecurities. Yet despite everything, Vicky retains an innocence and kindness that shine through her eccentricities. Her world, though lonely, makes perfect sense, until Mike Mayweather finally storms into it from the peripheries within which he used to reside in her life.
Mike, rough around the edges and proud of his blue-collar roots, initially sees Vicky as the embodiment of everything he resents; privilege, coldness, and control. Their interactions up till the turning point in the novel are antagonistic and bristling with tension, as he dismisses her interest and mocks her awkward attempts to connect.
But as the truth about Vicky’s past and her struggles come to light, Mike’s defenses crumble. Beneath his grumpiness lies a fiercely protective man who cannot help but respond to her vulnerability, and when he finally lets himself see her for who she is, the shift is as heartwarming as it is inevitable.
That said, the pacing of their relationship was jarring for me. The transition from simmering animosity to calling her “baby” and the full fledged devotion gave me a whiplash; one moment he cannot stand to be in the same room with her, and the next, they are in a whirlwind of emotion and commitment.
I would have liked to see more of that gradual unraveling, more space for the longing and the chase to breathe. Still, when you consider Vicky’s history of emotional neglect and the depth of her trauma, perhaps it made sense that once love found her, it was allowed to be simple, something she did not have to fight for.
What makes this book special is how gently and respectfully Susie Tate portrays neurodiversity. Vicky’s perspective is written with empathy giving readers an intimate understanding of her internal world. The humor and warmth that define Tate’s writing balance out the heavier themes of abuse and healing, making this a story that lingers, not because it’s perfect, but because it’s real. The epilogue, with its glimpse of Vicky’s hard-won happiness, was everything!
Recommended for: readers who love tender, character-driven romances with neurodiverse representation, grumpy-sunshine dynamics, and found-family warmth.
Final Verdict: Outlier is tender, funny, and deeply moving; a love story that celebrates imperfection, acceptance, and the courage to love without filters.
Favorite Quotes
I pulled her to me as I lay on the bed beside her, until her head was resting on my chest, and her small body was gathered close to me in my arms.
“Um…” She hummed. “Is this all standard procedure as well?”
“Oh yes,” I said, smiling up at the ceiling as I felt her softness relax into me, and her tension gradually draining away. “Very much so, love.”
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