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The House on Hope Street
The House on Hope Street
Author: Danielle Steel
Life was good for Liz and Jack Sutherland. In eighteen years of marraige, they had built a family, a successful law practice, and a warm, happy home near San Francisco, in a house on Hope Street. Then, in an instant, it all fell apart. It began like any other Christmas morning, with joy and children's laughter. But for Jack Sutherland, a five...  more »
ISBN: 208185
Publication Date: 2000
Edition: Unabridged
Rating:
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0 stars, based on 0 rating
Publisher: Bantam Doubleday Dell Audio Publishing
Book Type: Audio Cassette
Other Versions: Paperback, Hardcover, Audio CD
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

reviewed The House on Hope Street on + 64 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
This book is about learning to live again after you think life is over.
reviewed The House on Hope Street on + 105 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
A wife and mother puts the pieces back together after her husband is murdered.Liz and Jack Sutherland are successful divorce lawyers who live in Marin County, California, with their five children. On Christmas morning, the enraged husband of a client shoots Jack dead. In her typical singsong style, Steel (Granny Dan, 1999, etc.) takes Liz and her kids into the unthinkable horror of losing the person they love most in the world and then leads them pretty quickly out. Liz is helped through the following year by her best friend Victoria, her secretary Jean, and her housekeeper Carole. Nonetheless, in true soap-opera fashion, she shoulders most of the burden herself. Although she's grown to dislike dealing with people's nasty divorces, she stoically takes on a double caseload. She helps all her kids--especially her youngest child Jamie, a learning-delayed boy whose brain was damaged at birth--deal with the death of their father. When it comes time for the Special Olympics, an annual occasion for Jamie, Liz takes over Jack's job as trainer, coaching Jamie to his first winning medals ever. After an agonizing nine months of learning to sleep alone, Liz meets Dr. Bill Webster, the trauma doctor who helps her teenaged son Peter recover from a diving accident that left him with a head injury. Though Bill has always avoided long-term commitment, he can't help but be impressed by Liz's grit and her love for her family. Her daughter's resistance to him temporarily scares Bill off, but another Christmas finds him ready to take on carpooling with the manliest of them.This time out, Steel makes an intelligent choice of subject matter--and only occasionally threatens to treacle it to death.
reviewed The House on Hope Street on + 2 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I've always loved Danielle Steel, but she's really outdone herself this time. It covers all of the feelings a family would go through in a tragic sudden death of a spouse, including a bossy mother who loves to stick her nose where it doesn't belong...constantly! I really enjoyed it, more than anything I've read lately.
reviewed The House on Hope Street on + 19 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
The House on Hope Street is about learning to live again after you think life is over. It is about cherishing small miracles, and believing in big ones. It is above all about hope.
reviewed The House on Hope Street on + 61 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Big tear jerker, loved it! This is why I love Danielle Steel!
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reviewed The House on Hope Street on
I loved this book because it was an easy read
and it made me feel good. Its a simple story
and the characters were all believable.
You could actually see in your mind the plot
actually happening. A true love story where
she almost lets him get away!
scrapbooklady avatar reviewed The House on Hope Street on + 472 more book reviews
This book is a predictable love story, what we've all come to love about Danielle Steel's books. Perhaps we'd like a bit more unpredictability, but most of the time I enjoy the story anyway. Reading a book like this makes you feel so thankful for what you have, that's always a good thing. It also makes you think that if anything bad were to befall you, you could probably survive. This wasn't her best book, but I thought it was decent.
reviewed The House on Hope Street on + 8 more book reviews
excellent reading a typical daniel steel reading sad and happy and rolled into one great story
emeraldfire avatar reviewed The House on Hope Street on
During their eighteen years of marriage, Liz and Jack Sutherland had built a tremendous life together. A close-knit and loving family, a successful law practice, and a warm, happy home somewhere near San Francisco, in a house on Hope Street. The couple truly loved one another and were living the good life - life honestly couldn't be better for the Sutherland family.

However, on a bright, crisp Christmas morning, amid the laughter of children and the joy of the Season, tragedy strikes. In an instant, the peaceful life Liz Sutherland once knew is no more - and for Jack Sutherland a five-minute errand turns tragic. Suddenly Liz is alone, suffering in the wake of an unbearable loss.

She wonders how she can possibly go on living without her husband, her partner, the man she considered her best friend. How can she grieve herself, when she must be strong and console five devastated children, including one with special needs? Liz contemplates such painful questions, and is filled with despair.

As the months pass, Liz is strengthened by the love of her children. She eventually returns to work and slowly begins tending to her family again, becoming both mommy and "daddy" for her children. One by one the holidays come and go, until a devastating accident sends her oldest son to the hospital - and brings Dr. Bill Webster into her life. Bill becomes a friend to Liz as he slowly heals her shattered son.

As the long, lazy days of summer blend into autumn, a blossoming relationship offers new hope. So, with the first anniversary of Jack's death approaching, bringing with it another Christmas to the house on Hope Street - Liz reflects on life's little blessings; blessings that give strength when nothing else is left. However, Liz must face one more crisis before she can look back at a year of mourning and change - and ahead to the beginning of a new life in the house on Hope Street.

The House on Hope Street is about learning to live again after you think life is over. It is about cherishing the small miracles in life, and believing in the big ones. And it is, above all, about hope.

This was a very enjoyable story; and an easy, quick read for me. I found that the story was typically Danielle Steel - cresting from the highest of highs, to the lowest of lows in the space of a single plot line. While I found this story to be very well-written and interesting, it was slightly disconcerting for me to read about such flawless characters. I would give The House on Hope Street by Danielle Steel a B+!
reviewed The House on Hope Street on
My favorite of all the Danielle Steel books, I could just not put this book down, read it in one night! A wonderful book of loss and love.
reviewed The House on Hope Street on + 14 more book reviews
Typical Danielle Steele. I've read this book several times and enjoyed it everytime I've read it.
navywifeSD avatar reviewed The House on Hope Street on + 4 more book reviews
I love *everything* by Danielle Steel - I've been a fan for many years! Another novel to keep you page turning till the end! :0)
reviewed The House on Hope Street on + 24 more book reviews
I read it in one day. This is the first danielle Steel I ever read and it was a real page turner.
grannysmith avatar reviewed The House on Hope Street on + 6 more book reviews
Typical of Steel's work, this is the story of a new widow and her family's struggle to survive the tragic change that is thrust upon them. A quick read on 4 cassettes over 7 hours, it is unabridged and read by Joseph Siravo.


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