Ratings5
Average rating2.8
After John Tetherly and Becca Copaken die in a freak car accident an hour after their wedding, their families are left to bridge stark class and cultural divides, and eventually forge deep-rooted bonds thanks to the twin deities of love and music. Becca's family is well off, from New York, and summers in Red Hook, Maine, a small coastal town where John's blue-collar single mother, Jane, cleans houses for a living. They interact, awkwardly, over how to bury the couple, the staging of an anniversary party, and over Jane's adopted niece, whose amazing musical talent makes a connection to Becca's ailing grandfather, a virtuoso violinist, who agrees to give her lessons. Becca's younger sister, Ruthie, a Fulbright scholar, meanwhile, falls in love with John's younger brother, Matt, the first Tetherly to go to college, before he drops out to work at a boatyard and finish restoring his brother's sailboat, which he plans on sailing to the Caribbean.
Reviews with the most likes.
I will start by saying the story was o.k. Several times, a chapter began and I questioned if I was reading the correct chapter. Then eventually, I determined there was a large time gap.
The writing was a joke. There are so many unnecessary adjectives used in this book.
But it wasn't just too many adjectives. There was often too much detail where it was never needed. I sadly laughed out loud many times when the author used adjective after adjective in an entire chapter, and the chapter should have just been a paragraph.
I listened to this book on audio CD. Toward the end, I was fast forwarding through chapters and didn't feel I missed a thing. I personally believe the book could have been one-third the size and I might have given it three stars, but no more.
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