10 member(s) found this review helpful.
This is my second book by Mansay (read "Vinegar Hill" first), and I have to say I really like her writing. She is so good at capturing emotions - REAL emotions - and the characters have such depth that you feel you really get to know them and have these vague yet somehow solid pictures of them in your mind.
This book was sad because of the tragedy that sends Meg and her husband out to sail the "blue water," but the true sadness was how they dealt - or didn't deal - with their loss. It makes one think of what on earth you would do in the face of such a tragedy. Simply hating the person who brought it on is not always so easy - nor is it very healthy.
This book was sad because of the tragedy that sends Meg and her husband out to sail the "blue water," but the true sadness was how they dealt - or didn't deal - with their loss. It makes one think of what on earth you would do in the face of such a tragedy. Simply hating the person who brought it on is not always so easy - nor is it very healthy.
5 member(s) found this review helpful.
This novel was my introduction to A. Ansay's writing and I loved every minute of it. I couldn't put the book down and finished it in 2 days. It was very well written with real emotion throughout. It was heartbreaking as the couple tried to move past their tragedy. I would love to read more books by Ms. Ansay.
4 member(s) found this review helpful.
Touching and poignant, as are all of Ansay,s novels, I loved this and could not put it down once I started it. Bestselling author, one of Ophra,s bookclub favorites.
2 member(s) found this review helpful.
I found this book a very engaging read. While I’m not a follower of sailing, I felt that the core story was centered on the characters and how they tried to deal with their loss and how it impacted both their relationship and their feelings on an individual level.
2 member(s) found this review helpful.
I really made myself finish this book. I felt the ending was an afterthought and did not flow with the story at all. The book dragged quite a bit and many times I felt I was reading *filler* and was asking what was the point of that?
2 member(s) found this review helpful.
Well-written, powerful novel. I think it's Ansay's best.
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
This book is very sad but a quick read. One of those that stay in your mind after you finish it.
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
A very good, thought-provoking book.
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
Excellent book! Quick,easy read.
Good book - it is an emotional read, sad, and thought-provoking.
Sad story about a couple in Wisconsin who lose their 6 year old child in a car accident. They decide to leave their hometown and live on thier boat sailing to Bermuda and the Bahamas. The woman that hit Megs car was someone they knew and they find out she was drinking. This story shows how everyone is affected by this accident. Good story on relationships between spouses, parents, children and friendships.
This book left me breathless. To understand the meaning of forgiveness, to find hope in the hopeless, to acknowledge that we are all essentially the same, to learn to let go of hate, this story is breathtaking! A moment in time that can't be changed. A "miracle child" who is born to a couple in their 40's is six when he is killed in a car accident caused by a drunken driver. That driver, Cindy Ann, turns out to be a high school friend, a mother of three girls who are all unharmed in the crash. The ties between the grief stricken mother, Meg, and Cindy Ann go back to a time when one confided to the other a terrible secret about her stepfather, who later shot himself. Unable to cope with this the knowledge in this confidence, Meg not only turned away, but implied that Cindy Ann might be to blame for what happened. Now, more than 20 years later, Meg tries to come to terms with the fact that her former friend has killed her son, as friend's children are unhurt. Meg and her husband Rex feel she should be made to pay in some way. They bring a civil suit, but before it is decided, they decide to leave the small Wisconsin town and all the terrible memories lingering there to live on a cruising sailboat. Meg understands that the suit has been dropped. Aboard the boat, and in ports where they land, they pretend to those they meet that they are childless. Still the pain and grief is relentless untill one night, at a girl's night out with women she has met sailing, startling stories of horror and tragedy are reveiled. It is a turning point for Meg. She is driven to find answers for herself, and in doing so, risks everything she has left. One of the best books I have ever read, lilting prose, powerful sentences, astonishing tenderness!
Read this book!
Read this book!
The book was just an ok read for me. While I loved the basic story line of overcoming the death of a child and forgiveness, the other parts on boating were far too detailed and I had no idea what some of the terms were because I have never been on a boat , nor do I want to. She could have stuck more to the basic plotline that veering so far off with all of the boating details. Overall it was a good story, but not one to keep for the bookshelf. Had to force myself to finish it.
If you love the sea you will love this book. If you love sailing you will love this book
Quite a page turner!
Quite a good book. the ending surprised me
great story
great writing
by the author of Vinegar Hill
great writing
by the author of Vinegar Hill
Excellent book, a very powerful story from an excellent writer.
Very descriptive characters. Plot thickens with decisions regarding continuing life after their son dies. The direction their lives go forward has many twists, some tense, some of relief. The reader develops strong views on relationships within the story. Great read!
On an ordinary morning in Fox Harbor. wisconsin, Meg and Rex Van Dorn's lives are irrevocably changed when a drunk driver - Meg's onetime best friend, Cindy Ann Kreisler-slamsinto the Van Dorns' car, killing their six-yesr-old son, Evan.
The story goes on through the couples first year after their child's death. Describing the ways in which they try to cope - make sense of it all. Ansay provides observant insight into each character and dekivers it though her powerful writing.
The story goes on through the couples first year after their child's death. Describing the ways in which they try to cope - make sense of it all. Ansay provides observant insight into each character and dekivers it though her powerful writing.
Good storyteller!
From New York Times Bestselling Author A. Manette Ansay comes an unforgettable story of two families united by tragedy -- and one woman's deeply emotional journey toward a choce she'd never have thought possible.
Excellent and moving book about coping witht the loss of a child
This was a really sad story about a family who had lost a child because of a drunk driver.


