"A realistic yet fine contemporary romance"
Twenty-four years old petit Norah Stevens and her mom have
relocated to Misty Harbor, Maine where she gets a job
writing a weekly column for the Hancock Review that
provides Views from the Other Side. Her mom's Pomeranian
Zsa Zsa has moved under the next door neighbor's bush
where Norah tries to get the canine diva. Ned Porter sees
her and introduces himself. However, Norah fears his size
as he seems even bigger than her father who beat her up
last year. As Norah adjusts to living amongst the Redwoods with even
the females extended Porter family easily topping six
feet, she finds herself attracted to Ned though remains
afraid of him. Ned reciprocates, but believes the
beautiful runt is wrong for him as he needs females like
his outdoor hefty but beautiful sister-in-laws. Still as
love connects them, their relationship cannot grow until
she overcomes her phobia that giant males equate to abuse. HARBOR NIGHTS is a fine contemporary romance that focuses
on how abuse can potentially devastate a person's psyche
and ultimately even relationships with a caring soulmate.
The story line is character driven as neither Norah nor
Ned is comfortable with the size gap, but their reasons
greatly differ. He because he assumes a big outdoor guy
needs a big woman; she because of her father's recent
physical abuse. Though the resolution seems abrupt as
love conquers all (this reviewer believes it would need
time to heal the wounded), fans will enjoy the return to
Misty Harbor (see BERRY MERRY CHRISTMAS and BLUEBERRY
HILL). Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted August 12, 2005
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