Lightning
Material type:
- 9780552137492
- Fiction STE
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Colombo Fiction | F/STE |
Available
Order online |
CA00020262 | |||
![]() |
Colombo Fiction | F/STE |
Available
Order online |
CA00020263 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
In Lightning, bestselling novelist Danielle Steel tells the story of a woman whose life is changed by one swift, unexpected stroke of fate.
As a partner in one of New York's most prestigious law firms, Alexandra Parker barely manages to juggle husband, career, and the three-year-old child she gave birth to at forty. Then lightning strikes - a routine medical check-up turns her world upside down when tests reveal shattering news. Her husband Sam, a Wall Street whiz-kid, is as proud of his long-time marriage to Alex as he is of his successful career - until he is caught off guard by Alex's illness. Terrified of losing his wife and family, Sam fails to provide any kind of emotional support.
Almost overnight, Sam takes his distance from Alex, and they become strangers. As lightning strikes them yet again, Sam's promising career suddenly explodes into disaster, and his very life and identity are challenged. With his future hanging in the balance, Alex must decide what she feels for Sam, if life will ever be the same for them again, or if she must move on without him.
Excerpt provided by Syndetics
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Library Journal Review
In Steel's latest, a happily married couple's relationship is tested by tragedy. Alexandra Parker has enough trouble coping with bad news from the doctor, but her husband's seeming lack of supportand a catastrophic plunge in his careercould push the marriage over the cliff. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Publishers Weekly Review
The latest offering from the indefatigable Steel is as much a cancer-survival manual as it is a romance novel. Alexandra Parker has it alla partnership at one of New York's most prestigious law firms, a lovable husband of 17 years and a beautiful little girl. Then a routine checkup reveals breast cancer. Like lightning, her whole world is shattered. At 40, Alex loses not only her breast and hair but also her husband and happy home. Wall Street wizard Sam Parker loves his wife, but Alex's illness terrifies him (his mother died of cancer). So, instead of supporting her, he turns to a younger, healthier woman. Alex, devastated by Sam's emotional abandonment and scared to death of what is happening to her body, is ready to give up on herself and life when in steps a wonderful younger man who helps her regain her spirit, her courage and her sense of worth. Planning to remarry, Alex is about to ask Sam (now living with his girlfriend) for a divorce when lightning strikes again. This time, it's Sam who's on the brink of disaster: his partners have embezzled their clients' money. Suddenly, Sam realizes how much he needs and loves a cancer-free Alex; but will the spurned heroine return to him? Steel's messagethat women are stronger than men but more foolish in lovemay annoy some readers, but Alex's brave struggle to survive is inspiring and will have most of the author's fans cheering as usual by the novel's sentimental, three-handkerchief finale. Major ad/promo; rights: Janklow & Nesbit. (July) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reservedBooklist Review
The grande dame of women's fiction has produced another novel that's bound to be a hit with her fans. The story centers on high-powered and (of course) long-legged and beautiful attorney Alex Parker. Parker has it all, so it seems: her career is going great, her handsome and equally high-powered financial wizard husband is madly in love with her, and they have a wonderful three-year-old child and are trying to conceive again. Alex's world comes crashing to a halt, however, when her doctor determines that she has a lump in her breast. Worse yet, after the lump is found to be malignant, she must undergo a mastectomy. Meanwhile, her husband, unable to cope with Alex's disease, turns hateful and mean, refusing to give her emotional support during her surgery and chemotherapy and eventually embarking on an affair that hastens the end of their marriage. While the story line may seem like "disease of the week" material, Steele is in her element here, using high drama, pathos, and unpredictable plot developments that will keep fans in suspense until the end. (Reviewed Apr. 15, 1995)0385311923Kathleen HughesKirkus Book Review
A happy family is shattered and scattered when a career woman is diagnosed with breast cancer: Steel's (The Gift, 1994, etc.) very damp--indeed, heavy-weeping--latest. Beautiful Alexandra Parker (her legs are long, her hair is red)--a top-flight Manhattan attorney specializing in labor law and libel--has been been happily married for 17 years to handsome Sam Parker, a top-flight venture capitalist. Alexandra and Sam are the middle-aged parents (she's 42) of adorable four-year-old Annabelle. Then one day Alex has a routine mammogram, and her world shatters: She will have to have surgery to remove a large malignant mass. Even before the radical mastectomy, however, and then afterward at home, what becomes horrifyingly clear to Alex is that her husband can't cope with her terrors and grief. At one point, Sam accuses her of ``whining'' and demands: ``Why can't you suffer quietly?'' (It seems that his mother's death from cancer has immobilized compassion). Then, for Alex, there are six months of chemotherapy. While Sam succumbs to the siren call of Daphne the British bombshell, his wife's balding head is being held by assistant partner Brock in marathon regurgitations in the office bathroom. Eventually, Brock and Alex (even before the six months are past) become lovers, Sam begins to have doubts about Daphne, and Annabelle is shuttled back and forth between parents. Then disaster strikes again when Sam and his partners are indicted for fraud and embezzlement. Is it the slammer for Sam? Will Alex solve her dilemma of loving both Brock the Kind and Sam the Pain, still her (now repentent) husband? Steel stretches the suspense until the last few pages. It was inevitable that prolific Steel would tackle a (rightfully) current concern, but--well, suffering along with Alex does not offer typical Steelian recreation.There are no comments on this title.