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Book Reviews of A Soft Place to Land

A Soft Place to Land
A Soft Place to Land
Author: Susan Rebecca White
ISBN-13: 9781439194812
ISBN-10: 1439194815
Publication Date: 4/2010
Pages: 328
Rating:
  • Currently 3.2/5 Stars.
 55

3.2 stars, based on 55 ratings
Publisher: Touchstone
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

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

reviewed A Soft Place to Land on
Helpful Score: 4
I just finished this book; it was a quick read, but really didn't capture my attention. If I hadn't finished it I wouldn't have missed not knowing the whole story.

I feel the characters were not fully developed. I didn't care that I didn't know the characters fully because they didn't interest me all that much. Though I did like Evelyn Edge-the woman that moved into Ruthie and Julia's house after they moved out.

It is an ok summer read-not a total waste of time, but if you don't get to finish it, you didn't miss much.
24speedracer avatar reviewed A Soft Place to Land on + 42 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
I thought the story line was interesting and I liked how it spanned 20 years. However, the first third of the book, especially, seemed to draaaaggg on. It seemed the author had to explain every single reference she made and provide every detail ad nauseum. I doubt I will read any of her other books.
reviewed A Soft Place to Land on + 272 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I liked this book, but I had trouble paying attention most of the time. It didn't stir anything.
lilliemae avatar reviewed A Soft Place to Land on + 14 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Great story about sisters who face an awful tragedy at a young age and how it affects their lives. Quick read, hard to put down.
reviewed A Soft Place to Land on + 53 more book reviews
This is the second book I have read by this author, and I thought A Place At the Table was much better.


The story begins in 1993 with Ruthie, 12 years old, and Julia, 16 years old, are close half-sisters whose lives are traumatized after their parents, Naomi and Phil Harrison, die in a small-plane crash over the Grand Canyon. As a result, Ruthie ends up living with Mimi (Phil's sister) and Robert in San Francisco while Julia winds up living with Matthew (her biological father) and her stepmother Peggy in Virden, Virginia. Ruthie happens to be the protagonist.

Unfortunately, the sisters deal with the death of their parents differently. Ruthie does well in school, receives therapy, and becomes friends with Dora while living with her rich aunt and uncle. Regrettably, Julia rebels and skips school, drinks, smokes, and takes drugs, thus forcing her father and stepmother to send her to a Fundamentalist rehab center.

The story continues on until 2009, relating the complex relationship between Ruthie and Julia.

I enjoyed that the author included the events of 9/11 in light of Julia living in New York at that time. Furthermore, Julia happens to be one of the passengers on the US Airways Flight 1549 that crash landed on-the-go Hudson River on January 15, 2009.

Anyway, I felt like this book had great potential, but the ending was quite strange. It felt like the author did not know how to end the story, so she just stopped writing. For example, Ruthie and Gabe, her husband, had an argument about children - he wanted them, but she did not. Also, Julia was planning on writing a memoir about her childhood, and Ruthie was still mad at her regarding her previous non-fiction novel. Julia had included information surrounding Ruthie's abortion without her knowledge.
reviewed A Soft Place to Land on
An easy read about the lives of two sisters and how they are changed by one event. Good read!
berd avatar reviewed A Soft Place to Land on + 214 more book reviews
I was fairly disappointed in this book. It was decent enough that I kept with it to see how it would play out, but it never seemed to get off the ground for me. I felt like the characters never really pulled me in enough and it always felt like something was missing. One of my biggest issues with the book was that so many controversial topics were brought in that it felt a bit overwhelming. A couple topics might have added to the overall plot, but I felt like too many just weighted down what could have been a great story line. I also felt like the book skipped around a lot, which just made it feel as if there were a lot of holes in the story. Additionally, many of those holes were never explained by the end of the book. I wouldn't recommend this one unless you just need something to read and have run out of other ideas.
reviewed A Soft Place to Land on + 22 more book reviews
This was such a good book! I couldn't put it down.
reviewed A Soft Place to Land on + 44 more book reviews
Great read!