Long Road Home
Material type:
- 9780552145022
- F/STE
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Colombo Fiction | F/STE | Checked out | 17/05/2025 | CA00022605 | ||
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Colombo Fiction | F/STE |
Available
Order online |
CA00020324 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
A novel of courage, hope and love...
From her secret perch at the top of the stairs, seven-year-old Gabriella watches the guests arrive at her parents' lavish Manhattan home. The click, click click of her mother's high heels strikes terror into her heart, as she has been told that she is to blame for her mother's rage - and her father's failure to protect her. Her world is a confusing blend of terror, betrayal and pain, and Gabriella knows that there is no safe place for her to hide.
When her parents' marriage collapses, her father disappears and her mother abandons her to a convent, where Gabriella's battered body and soul begin to mend amid the quiet safety and hushed rituals of the nuns. And when she grows into womanhood, young Father Joe Connors comes into her life. Like Gabriella, Joe is haunted by the pain of his childhood, and with her he takes the first steps towards healing. But their relationship leads to disaster as Joe must choose between the priesthood and Gabriella. She struggles to survive on her own in New York, where she seeks escape through her writing, until eventually she is able to find forgiveness, freedom from guilt, and healing from abuse.
In this work of daring and compassion, Danielle Steel has created a vivid portrait of an abused child's broken world which will shock and move you to your very soul.
Excerpt provided by Syndetics
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Publishers Weekly Review
Scandal, betrayal and treachery do little to animate this dreary saga from the prolific Steel (The Ghost). By the time she's six, Gabriella Harrison has known nothing but torture at the hands of her battering mother, Eloise, a socialite who hates childrenespecially her own. Gabbie's alcoholic father is incapable of dealing with the madness that rules the mansion and soon escapes with another woman. Then Eloise decides she's tired of mothering and abandons 10-year-old Gabbie at St. Matthew's convent. Gabbie blossoms at the nunnery, where she finds unconditional love from the sisters, a talent for writing and, later, illicit passion in the arms of a priest. When discovered, the affair leads to the priest's suicide and Gabbie's eviction from the convent. Always one to make lemonade of life's lemons, however, Gabbie assuages her grief with new friends, a new lover and her burgeoning talent as a writer. Still, tragedy tails her like a lost puppy, and her monstrous mother casts a long shadow over her triumphs. Steel's latest attempt at a redemption story falls flat because of repetitious prose and two-dimensional characters. The inevitable happy ending, when it finally arrives, can't make up for a plodding narrative lacking in any real suspense. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reservedBooklist Review
Steel has twisted and tweaked her usual formulaic plot for this latest offering. It's the story of Gabriella Harrison, a beautiful child born to abusive, neglectful, but wealthy parents. Gabriella leads a tortured life, suffering near-fatal beatings from her psychotic mother and drunken indifference from her spineless father. Eventually the parents divorce, abandoning young Gabriella to a convent, where she spends the rest of her formative years. Terrified of leaving the convent, Gabriella vows to become a nun; that vow is cut short, however, when the beautiful, gentle, good, and kind novice Gabriella catches the eye of a dashing young priest. Soon there's all sorts of mayhem: secret make-out sessions in the confessionals, illicit meetings when the nuns are away, and breathy, whispered phone calls. Eventually, Gabriella finds herself pregnant, the dashing young priest kills himself, and she loses the baby; she also gets expelled from the nunnery for this behavior. Like any true Steel heroine, however, Gabriella pulls herself out of these apparently insurmountable troubles to find both true love and a satisfying writing career. Contemporary romance fans will enjoy. --Kathleen Hughes YA: Steel's usual plot twists add spice to this coming-of-age story; for older readers. KS.Kirkus Book Review
Steel (The Ranch, 1997, etc.) actually manages to minimize child abuse in this saccharine take on tragedy. Poor little Gabbie is not only a victim. She is the Victim's Victim. Her wealthy mother Eloise feels jealous of her: She abuses Gabble almost daily for the first decade of her life. She starves her, smashes her dolls, and breaks her ribs every Christmas. She bruises her kidneys and cuts up her face. But Gabbie's emotional wounds are even worse, for Eloise has persuaded her that everything wrong with the family is her fault. Meanwhile, Gabbie's father is a prodigious weakling who drinks to forget his terrible home life, eventually deserting both daughter and wife. In what is probably an act of mercy, Gabbie's mother runs off with another man and abandons the girl at a Manhattan convent. To protect herself from a malevolent world, Gabble decides to become a nun. But the world has other plans for this girl whose tribulations make those of Job look like chopped liver. She falls in love with a priest and becomes pregnant (after all, what do priests know about condoms?). The priest then commits suicide; after a painful miscarriage, Gabbie almost dies. To top it off, the church forces her out of the convent with only $500 and two badly tailored dresses to her name. She's seduced by a con man, then robbed and beaten within an inch of her life. At this point, Gabble decides to be a victim no longer. She tries to find her mother, visits her father, and conveniently meets a nice young doctor. After her bruises heal, the physician (unsurprisingly) falls in love with her. Steel goes to battle with yet another worthy cause, but her good intentions this time fizzle in a sea of †ber-melodrama. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.There are no comments on this title.
Other editions of this work
No cover image available | The Long Road Home by Steel, Danielle ©1998 |
No cover image available | Long Road Home by Steel, Danielle ©1999 |