by Mhairi McFarlane ‧ RELEASE DATE: June 3, 2014
Fun and engaging but with thought-provoking twists that deepen the emotional impact beyond light romantic comedy.
History professor Anna Alessi is shocked when she has to work with James Fraser, her high school tormentor; stymied when he doesn’t recognize her; and stunned when she finds herself falling for him.
Formerly fat and friendless, Anna is meeting her 30s with the same planning and determination that helped her earn her advanced degree, land her dream teaching position and slim down, though she has never quite come to think of herself as any kind of beauty or social contender. Still, it's time to meet a man, and as she signs up for a variety of online dating sites, she has the opportunity to work on a fabulous history exhibit at a local museum, where she meets James, the tech expert who will be creating computer-interactive features for the project and who was also the merciless instigator of the cruelest prank of her school days. Anna trusts him about as far as she could throw her high school self, but as they work together and get to know each other, she begins to lower her defenses. As their friendship grows against the backdrop of Anna’s disastrous dates, her sister’s problematic upcoming wedding, James’ disintegrating marriage and his womanizing friend Laurence, Anna finds herself considering something more, until the disturbing moment James discovers who Anna used to be, forcing him to face who he was—and is. From the beginning, we are drawn to Anna’s pain as a bullied student, and we can see James, the idol of their school and her painful crush, turning on her with the stinging malevolence of teen cruelty. Smoothly written and nicely constructed, with an interesting and powerful look at the past and the hold it can have on us, yet with a keen eye toward how empowering struggle can be.
Fun and engaging but with thought-provoking twists that deepen the emotional impact beyond light romantic comedy.Pub Date: June 3, 2014
ISBN: 978-0-00-755947-3
Page Count: 448
Publisher: Avon/HarperCollins
Review Posted Online: May 6, 2014
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2014
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by Fern Michaels ‧ RELEASE DATE: Dec. 30, 2003
Michaels’s cluttered style has been noticeably trimmed this time around, which keeps the over-the-top plot moving right...
Good brother, bad brother.
It’s 1984: Rick, a wild young Hollywood star and all-around stud, is boozing heavily and secretly doing drugs—but he’s been warned. His controlling, money-mad, hyper-responsible older brother Philly isn’t going to bail him out next time, or square things with that dated entity referred to only as “the studio.” Skip to 1999: Rick’s sobered up and he’s still going strong. “He had a tinge of gray at his temples these days, but the studio expertly covered it up.” (The prolific Michaels may have been too busy churning out bestsellers to notice that studios haven’t kept actors under contract for decades, but never mind.) Rick skips the dye job, however, when Philly dies in an accident and leaves most of his estate to his ne’er-do-well brother, who gives up acting and takes over the resorts-for-the-rich that Philly was developing, though Roxy, Philly’s trashy wife, resents him for it. Ditto Reba, Roxy’s plastic surgeon daughter: Philly was like a father to her but he didn’t leave her much money. Well, what the hell, Rick wants to make everyone happy and redeem himself, so he lets Roxy take over the Crown Jewel, their flagship island resort—and he makes peace with Max and Tyler, the grown sons who never knew him (Philly paid off their mothers), then befriends tough but cute reporter Gracie Lick, and investigates the mystery of Philly’s parentage. Gee, Philly was adopted! Can it be true that Philly’s real mother, 14 when he was born, is now married to aged billionaire Armand Farquar? And did the young Lorraine rescue her newborn son from a Dumpster when her heartless lover tossed him in and then bravely give him up for adoption? She did! And is her lover, Philly’s father, now the Vice President of the United States? He is! Will reporter Gracie Lick take this unlikely story and run with it? She will!
Michaels’s cluttered style has been noticeably trimmed this time around, which keeps the over-the-top plot moving right along. For the fans.Pub Date: Dec. 30, 2003
ISBN: 0-7434-5779-X
Page Count: 320
Publisher: Atria
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 2003
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by Sherryl Woods ‧ RELEASE DATE: May 28, 2013
Not Woods’ best, but a smoothly written, beach-themed story with a happy ending helps forgive the weaknesses.
When Samantha, an established-yet-struggling actress, comes home to act as maid-of-honor in her sister’s wedding, the family unabashedly tries to pair her with the best man, Ethan, her teenage crush and now a local war hero.
Samantha is the oldest Castle, and while her two sisters found true love in quick succession, she’s in New York with a struggling acting career and no Mr. Right on the horizon. Coming home to Sand Castle Bay, N.C., for youngest sister Emily’s wedding, Samantha is continually thrown in the path of Ethan Cole, local football champion–turned–war hero. Samantha had a huge high school crush on Ethan but is surprised to learn he lost a leg in Afghanistan, and his then-fiancee abandoned him soon after. Spending time with him now, Samantha realizes what a wonderful man he is, but the association is tainted by the humiliating lengths her family is going to in order to get them together. And while Ethan is a great and honorable man, his post-war romantic experience has left him gun-shy and determined to avoid relationships. At a crossroads in her own life, Samantha has to decide whether she’s going to stay in Sand Castle Bay or go back to her sputtering career in New York—and what her hopes are with Ethan. The two navigate insecurities and misunderstandings as they fall in love and fight for their happily-ever-after. Woods' latest is slightly off-key. Great writing and deft characterization can’t save a thin romantic conflict, and the more Ethan clings to his “I’ve given up on love” position, the less heroic he becomes. Some secondary storylines offer similarly shrill undertones that denote a disturbing lack of communication, unrealistic expectations and waffling with annoying justification. Still, in the end, love conquers all in satisfying ways for everyone concerned, and this ties up a few loose ends for the trilogy.
Not Woods’ best, but a smoothly written, beach-themed story with a happy ending helps forgive the weaknesses.Pub Date: May 28, 2013
ISBN: 978-0-7783-1446-2
Page Count: 400
Publisher: Harlequin MIRA
Review Posted Online: April 28, 2013
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2013
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