Bittersweet
Material type:
- 9780552145039
- F/STE
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Colombo Fiction | F/STE | Checked out | 25/05/2019 | CA00020422 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
India Taylor lived in a world of manicured lawns and neatly-maintained calendars. With four wonderful children, India believed in commitment and sacrifice, just as she believed in Doug, the man she had married seventeen years before. She had chosen this life, not the award-winning career as a photojournalist she once had, and it was a choice she had never regretted - until she began to regret it with all her heart.
India couldn't pinpoint the exact moment when the price of the sacrifices she she'd made began to seem high. But when she met Paul Ward, a Wall Street tycoon married to a bestselling author, India could share her dreams with him, and offer comfort when he suffered a heartbreak of his own. India hadn't planned to become Paul's friend, and anything more was unthinkable.When Paul urged India to reclaim her career, Doug was adamantly against it, determined to keep her tied to the home. But with Paul's encouragement India slowly, painfully, began to break free and find herself again.
Excerpt provided by Syndetics
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Library Journal Review
India Taylor, who has sacrificed a major career to husband and children, starts to rethink her life when she strikes up a friendship (?) with a married tycoon. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Publishers Weekly Review
Many a stay-at-home mom's worst nightmare is realized in Steel's latest novel when India Taylor's husband, Doug, threatens to end their 17-year marriage if she dares to pursue her long-abandoned photojournalism career. Doug repetitively intones that marriage is by necessity an unromantic contract in which the wife's sole purpose is to care for the home, kids and husband, and if she reneges on her end of the deal with a pipe dream of independence, that is the ultimate "deal breaker." But in tried-and-true Steel (Mirror Image, etc.) fashion, India has a handsome Wall Street billionaire, Paul Ward, in the wings. His glamorous wifeÄan internationally bestselling authorÄdies in a plane crash several months after he and India have struck up a close friendship. But then Paul turns guilty and skittish about the budding romance, leaving India alone to face the harsh realities of being a single mom of four. Predictably, India's desolation is brief, punctuated by travel, adventure, a thrilling new career and a near-tragedy to put everything into perspective. As usual, Steel takes a theme of interest or concern to manyÄin this case, a woman striking out on her ownÄand turns it into a compulsively readable tale. With its swiftly moving story line and tidy love-conquers-all ending, Steel's latest should gratify her millions of fans. Major ad/promo. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reservedBooklist Review
India Taylor abandoned a promising career as a photojournalist 17 years ago to marry Doug and bear four children. All well and good, but now she's feeling unfulfilled and wants to return to work part-time. Doug is simply outraged. As far as he's concerned, her part of their bargain is to stay home and care for the children. If she wants to take her little pictures, there's always the soccer team, new babies in the neighborhood, or more snapshots of their kids. That, he believes, is enough. Now that she sees her "perfect" marriage for the trap it really is, India takes a much-needed break, settling at the seashore with the kids for a thoughtful summer, during which a chance meeting with tycoon Paul Ward and his wife, Serena, inspires her to envision new directions for her life. Faced with Doug's unrelenting disapproval, she knows now that she must choose between the safety of the known and the adventure yet to begin. But will readers care? This tired tale fails to meet Steel's past standards or to set new ones. The plot's initial promise fizzles out after an onslaught of page after page of dull dialogue, and it lacks the imagination, romance, and yes, the sex, that have made Steel such a consistent best-seller. --Melanie DuncanKirkus Book Review
For diehard Steel fans only. As the author gets older, so, happily, do her protagonists'although they always, always, look at least ten years younger than their chronological age. In India Taylor's case, these good looks aren't the result of lots of live-in help. Since she gave up her career as a photojournalist 14 years earlier (Steel makes it clear that she could have won a Pulitzer), India has dedicated herself to the rearing of her four swell kids: chauffeuring, soccer-momming, watching ballet classes, and creating a lovely home in the prosperous New York suburb of Westport, Connecticut. But creeping in between the endless car pools is India's suspicion that there might be more to life. She misses her job; her spirit hungers for a little more career mixed in with wife-and-motherhood. But Doug, her anachronistic husband, has forbidden her even an occasional photo gig. Apparently, India agreed to this domestic arrangement when they married. Her dad, a prizewinning photojournalist, died in action, and India doesn't want her children growing up without both parents as she did. Add to this emotional stew the fact that Doug doesn't believe in romance or passionate love anymore, and you have one mad, dissatisfied housewife. When India meets Paul Ward, the ``Lion of Wall Street,'' on his fabulous sailboat at the Cape, she sees a guy who's not afraid of living with a career-obsessed woman. Paul's wife is the successful novelist Serena Smith. On her way to Europe, Serena's plane is blown up by, yes, Arab terrorists, and Paul goes into deep mourning. He and India form a close friendship while crying on each other's shoulders, and that friendship quickly develops into love. Their romantic ups and downs (the bitter and the sweet, of course) culminate in the jungle of Rwanda and come to the standard conclusion during a hurricane manqu off the Massachusetts coast. Steel manages to make even some solid ideas sound treacly and dated.There are no comments on this title.
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No cover image available | Bittersweet by Steel, Danielle ©2010 |