Miller probes marriage and family with characteristic insight and poignancy.

Virginia K. (
GinaK) wrote on 2/4/2007...
Another of Sue Miller,s studies of life and it,s meaning that sometimes is not obvious to those looking at family relationships. Fastinating.

Joey S. (
Joey) wrote on 11/4/2006...
"It's the kind of book that is so subtly involved that it didn't seem like much was happening, but...the ideas were profound. Every detail means something. Very unique and believable characters. Definitely worth the read, especially for Sue Miller fans." amazon review
A fantastic fantastic book!!

Laura B. (
Books) wrote on 3/26/2006...
One of Miller's BEST. A beautiful story, wonderfully told. Hated it to end.
New England, 1919. Nineteen year old Georgia Rice, who has cared for her father and two siblings ever since her mother's death, is diagnosed with consumption and sent away to a sanitarium. Freed from the burdens of running a household, she discovers a nearly lost world of youth and possibility - and a doomed romance.
The present. Catherine Hubbard, Georgia's granddaughter, no longer feels any attachment to her life in San Fransico. After her divorce, she shudders when she hears herself refer to a man she lived with for twelve years as her "second" husband - words she could never, in her youth, have imagined uttering. So when Georgia's old Vermont house is passed down to her, Cath seizes the cance to return to the simple comfort of her childhood home. There, sorting through her own affairs, Cath stumbles upon Georgia's diaries. Through them, she glimpses the true world of her grandparents that lingered below the one she saw- and the misunderstang upon which Georgia built a lifelong love.