A man loses his wife, lives in a haze, and then finds healing new love until the secrets start popping. nonfictio.
Sweet, accessible, uplifting and predictable, the latest love story from
Sparks (The Notebook) leaves the reader with just one burning question:
Why is this consummate beach book being published in the fall? The
nearly thwarted but eventually triumphant romance of deputy sheriff
Miles Ryan and second-grade teacher Sarah Andrews goes down as easily as
marshmallow fluff and offers about as much real nourishment. Miles's
high school sweetheart, Missy, was killed in an unsolved hit and run
accident, leaving him to raise their son, Jonah, in New Bern, N.C.
Sarah's politically ambitious husband, Michael, dumped her when her
ovaries proved inactive, and she fled to New Bern to teach, and love,
other people's kids. Miles and Sarah meet at a parent-teacher
conference, and the sparks fly. But there's a fly in the ointment as
well; an italicized voice threaded among the happy chapters alerts us
that Missy's death was caused by someone whose identity, if revealed,
could destroy Miles and Sarah's newfound joy. In Sparks's heaven, clouds
exist to make silver linings look the brighter. As tough truth shadows
their landscape, Miles and Sarah find depths within themselves, and
their rekindled light illumines all. New Bern becomes a city of the
reborn. Charlie Curtis, Miles's stickler boss, learns to bend; Missy's
aimless killer morphs into a healer; and Jonah once again knows a
mother's love. The opposite of edgy, with simple sentences and
soft-pedaled sex, Sparks's plain vanilla morality will doubtless sell
like ice cream on a steamy day. (Sept.)Forecast: Major television and
print advertising and an 18-city author tour will broadcast Sparks's
latest from the rooftops; expect instant bestsellerdom.