"A beautiful love story"
For years her identity was defined as Janet's daughter,
Molly's mother, or Monte's wife. She accommodated the
needs of everyone else at the cost of her own. With her
daughter out of the house, Julia Bechtel decides to escape
from her spouse so she can ponder what she wants to do
with her unfulfilling marriage. Julia takes the ferry to
visit her Aunt Zoe on Big Sawyer Island off the Maine
coast. However, another vessel runs into the ferry
causing both boats to explode. Julia, lobsterman Noah Prince, and islander Kim Colette
are the only survivors. Julia realizes that for some
unknown heavenly reason she has been provided with a
chance to live life on her terms. Every day is a
miraculous gift as she now knows she can never return to
her unsatisfying life in New York unless substantial
changes occur. Comfort comes in Noah's arms, but Julia
wonders if she has the courage to seek love with him
because that would disappoint her daughter and her parents
whose opinions she values. Every venture that Barbara Delinsky takes her fans on is
unique as the author never writes the same book twice.
THE SUMMER I DARED is a beautiful love story as much as a
character study of an individual finding courage with her
second chance at life. The eccentric secondary cast,
especially the barrier island crowd, keeps the tale from
turning too inwardly maudlin while also enabling the
audience to see the inner struggles of the heroine. Noah
has his own demons in a neglected teenage son. All this
adds up to a wonderful in depth relationship drama that
focuses on the turmoil of good caring people. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted April 25, 2004
|