Archive for the ‘Romance’ Category

Now & Then, Jacqueline Sheehan

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

I was so excited to find this book at Half Price Books, after reading Lost & Found last summer (which I reviewed here).

Honestly, I didn’t pay much attention to the story line on the back of the book.  I read the first line “Anna O’Shea has failed at marriage, shed her job at a law firm, and she is trying to re-create herself when she and her recalcitrant nephew are summoned to the past in a manner that nearly destroys them” and the final words “and one unforgettable dog named Madigan” from the back cover.  On the front cover is a cute dog being hugged by a blonde woman.  I did not read any more of it, nor process that line entirely.  I bought it based on the fact that there was a dog on the cover (as there was in Lost & Found) and on my past experience with the author.

When I got home and read further,  I see that it is not what it appears.

Summoned to the past … what does that mean?  I thought that it would mean through photographs, memories, tales something like that … but no, it’s actually being summoned to the past.  Over a hundred years ago … to Ireland.   Anna and her nephew really are transported to the past.   I’m getting ahead of myself.

The basic plot is that Anna is travelling home from overseas with a friend, when she is summoned to an out-of-town hospital where her brother Patrick has been admitted after an accident.   Patrick was on his way to pick up his son Joe from jail when the accident occurred.   Since Anna lives near the jail that Joe is being held, she is the one who goes to bail him out.   At this point, Anna is sleep-deprived and tired of driving, so she and Joe spend the night at her apartment, and promises Joe that she’ll take him to see his dad the next day.

During the night, Joe awakens, and for some reason is compelled to look through Anna’s luggage, and become enraptured with a piece of cloth that he finds in there.   Anna hears him, and when she gets up and finds him in her luggage, she gets mad and she tries to take the cloth away.   They tug with it and the next thing they know, they have been swept to Ireland, 164 years ago.  They are separated when they get there, Anna is found by a simple, poor family and Joe is taken in by a wealthy man and his family.    Anna immediately starts searching for Joe, and Joe, well… you know teenagers.

Yes, it’s a bit far-fetched.  But see, Ms. Sheehan pulls it off.  She is such an incredible writer.  The language she uses, she just pulls you in.  She makes you forget about the implausibility of time-travel, and sucks you into the story.   You really start to care about these two people.  You feel like you know them.    It’s interesting to see how two 21st century people adjust to life 164 years ago.  How they have to be careful not to reveal that they are really from the future.

The dog you ask?  Yes, there is a dog.  Is he unforgettable?  Probably not.   I had to revise this review after I remembered that I forgot to mention him.  Unlike in Lost & Found, Madigan is just a background character, he does not play a central role in the story.  At least that is how I felt.   He is important to a central character, however.

Will their actions affect the future?  Of them?  Their families?  What about the people they are staying with and have grown to care for?  The future?  Is it affected?  Read the book and find out.  Because although the book wasn’t what I expected, I still loved it and highly recommend.

Rating:  3 out of 4 stars.

Lost & Found, Jacqueline Sheehan/Good Grief, Lolly Winston

Sunday, October 11th, 2009

Two books.  Same underlying premise.  But very different.  The premise being woman’s husband dies, she has grief and the way to get over that grief is to move north, get a simpler job and fall in love again.

Jacqueline Sheehan’s Lost & Found takes place in Peak’s Island, Maine, where the protagonist, Rocky, a psychologist, moves to after her husband suddenly dies of a heart attack.  This is obviously a big shock and unexpected and Rocky finds herself unable to help her patients, so she takes a leave of absence and heads north.

She keeps her tragedy to herself, looks for a place to live and for a job.   The first friends she makes are Tess, a retired physical therapist with synthesia and her neighbors Elaine and her daughter Melissa.   She is given a shot at being an Animal Control Officer for the island, a job she is not really qualified for.    But with the friendships and the job, she begins to find a place of comfort and safety.

One day, she finds a black labrador with an arrow sticking out of his shoulder.  She calls him Cooper, and takes him in instead of taking to the shelter.  Cooper then becomes the main character, as he helps to heal Rocky and also Melissa, who has a secret of her own.  Rocky looks for the owner, trying to determine who it was who hurt the dog.  This mystery is also one of the themes of this book, and yes, the mystery does get solved and Rocky does fall in love again.

In Good Grief, Lolly Winston managed to describe grief so well that you felt it.  If you’ve lost anyone close to you, you will FEEL this book.  The main character in this book, Sophie, pretty much breaks down in a way we all fear we will if this would happen to us.   I have to admit being close to shedding a tear. Although a book can affect me profoundly,  I don’t usually cry openly when reading.

Sophie, a public relations executive in Silicon Valley, was no stranger to grief. Her mother died when she was 12, and now she had the unfortunate chance to watch her husband die, as he battled cancer.   When he died, she couldn’t function.  Before she actually got fired, she took a leave of absence and headed north to the small town of Ashland, Oregon, to stay with her best friend Ruth, and Ruth’s daughter, while she dealt with her grief.

Sophie struggled a lot more than Rocky, and after being unable to perform her job as a waitress in a cafe, she gets demoted to salad girl and then eventually to pastry, where she discovers her true passion.    Sophie also, as a result of the loss of her mother and having those emotions resurface, becomes a Big Sister to Crystal, a troubled pre-teen.  Their relationship changes both of them, which is surprising considering they are both a mess.  And they don’t have a dog to help them!

It’s only a few weeks after Sophie moves to Ashland when she tries dating again.  I cannot understand that part at all, as I cannot even imagine that in real life, Sophie would be ready to date again.  She is really having trouble dealing with the death of her husband.  Sophie does find love again at the end of the book, and it all takes place within a year.  I guess because its a novel, we have to let go of rationality and allow the time frame to be as such.  Although I do think it could have been written in two parts.  Part two being “Three Years Later” or something that would be more realistic.

Lost & Found had mystery and Good Grief had humor.  Both books were very good and very quick reads.  I highly recommend them both.  I give Lost & Found the edge, as I found Rocky’s “love story” a little bit more believable.

Verdict:  Lost & Found A; Good Grief B+