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Keeper and Kid
Keeper and Kid
Author: Edward Hardy
"Keeper and Kid is a marvel. I dare you. Open this book and try to put it down." ---Ann Hood, author of The Knitting Circle — Eight years ago, James Keeper fell in love with his upstairs neighbor in Boston, a sassy pastry chef with gray eyes and a fierce attitude. They got married, found a dog, and shopped for cilantro. But conflicting schedules ...  more »
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ISBN-13: 9780312573768
ISBN-10: 0312573766
Publication Date: 8/4/2009
Pages: 304
Rating:
  • Currently 3.2/5 Stars.
 5

3.2 stars, based on 5 ratings
Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review
Read All 2 Book Reviews of "Keeper and Kid"

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imablondtrustme avatar reviewed Keeper and Kid on + 10 more book reviews
I loved the writing; kind of breezy and casual. Great plotting. Leo (the Kid) is especially quirky. Hardy really makes these characters real.
peartree4000 avatar reviewed Keeper and Kid on + 29 more book reviews
I received my copy of Keeper and Kid from a Goodreads.com giveaway back in September of 2009 and it has taken me until April 2010 to pick it up to read
I picked this book up from my giant pile of unread books thinking that if I read anything it should be this just to get it off the pile and out of my way. Little did I know what I was getting myself into.
I started reading this on a Saturday evening around 5 pm and the next thing I knew I was on page 200 and it was 1 am. I got so caught up in this story of Keeper and his discovering parenthood. I seriously couldnt put it down.
I loved Keeper. His reactions to being thrown in with a 3 year-old are very real. I was a Nanny for a long time, and that first few months with new kids is just plain hard so I really felt for him. Getting used to their routines and their needs and their lives and forgetting your own. It is really hard.
I also identified with him on a more personal level since my sister-in-law and best friend just passed away last year leaving behind her 3 year-old. Constantly remembering those moment when you should have done something different, or wondering if you had done something else would it have ended the way it did. I cried a little while reading this book. Losing someone you love is like that.
I didnt like Leah from the beginning. I had already decided that she was not my favorite. I found myself wanting to know more about Cynthia and her life and her personality. Leo was adorable, though at first I thought he was a little too articulate for a 3 year-old, but as the story moved on he leveled out to what I know of 3 year-olds.
Tim is a really good friend. Everyone needs a friend like that in their lives to keep around when times are tough. What a good man.
I think this book reminds us all that life is not stationary and that we never know what to expect. Take the time to cherish the ones you love, and dont overburden yourself with stuff you cant do anything about. Just live in the moments.
There is just one item that I did not appreciate in this book. The over use of the f**k word. Im not a fan of it in real life so I prefer not to read it in my literature as well. I understand that my morals are different than most of the world and that is a perfectly acceptable word for most. I understand that it was one way to show the stress of the situation through words, and maybe Keeper just didnt have a better way of expressing himself, I just dont like hearing/reading it as the punctuation to everything. To have made this more realistic Leo should have started parroting it back to Keeper. Because they do. Thats usually a good way to get a parent to clean up their language.
But above all, I love this book. I will recommend it to others.


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