Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Book Reviews of The Carpenter's Lady

The Carpenter's Lady
The Carpenter's Lady
Author: Barbara Delinsky
ISBN-13: 9780061042317
ISBN-10: 0061042315
Publication Date: 5/1993
Rating:
  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
 20

4 stars, based on 20 ratings
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

5 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed The Carpenter's Lady on + 135 more book reviews
Enjoy her characters and their emotions, fun to read
reviewed The Carpenter's Lady on + 18 more book reviews
Shaken by a painful divorce, successful television writer Debra Barry leaves New York for the beautiful countryside of New Hampshire, where she hopes to find peace and solitude to mend her wounded heart. The old house she's bought, though, needs as much repairing as her own shattered emotions. To make it the home she's always wanted, she seeks the hel of master carpenter Graham Reid, a compellingly enigmatic man seemingly as hard as granite himself.

Hiding from his own bitter past, Graham reluctantly agrees to take the job, not suspecting that his own life is about to be altered as well. As the house begins to come together, he and Debra unexpectedly find themselves laying their own emotional groundwork. Drawn together by desire, can these two wounded lovers find the courage to tear down the walls between them and build on the promise of new love?
reviewed The Carpenter's Lady on + 3389 more book reviews
Reviewer: Judith Agee (SmallTown, Indiana USA) -
A pleasant, fluffy, easy read.
You can read it in a few hours.
Very light weight fare.
Pleasant characters with some nice dialog.
A reprint of a book Delinsky wrote early in her career.
Along the lines of a pleasant but far from literary harlequin romance.
reviewed The Carpenter's Lady on + 66 more book reviews
Trying to rebuild her life after a divorce, Debra Barry retreats to New Hampshire to sort out her emotions. Then she meets Graham Reid, a carpenter who agrees to renovate her house. People who she tried to leave behind in New York keep drifting in an out of her life and by the middle of the book you want to advise her to rip her phone out of the wall and forget everything else. When I read, a good book to me is one I can get involved in and this is one of those books.
reviewed The Carpenter's Lady on + 181 more book reviews
A classic, have both hadback and paperback