Patience, My Dear
-
- £6.99
-
- £6.99
Publisher Description
In this quirky, romantic novel a young woman is getting texts from an iPhone-obsessed God, and she’s not okay with that—her handsome new neighbor tries to intervene in the dispute, but is he on her side, or the Almighty’s?
Patience Kelleher doesn’t want to be a soldier of the Lord. She doesn’t want His voice in her head, and she certainly doesn’t want Him texting her emoticon-laden messages about boy band singers, sinister solar power corporations, and other failures that will lead to the world’s end. But what would a cranky, twenty-three-year-old waitress know about preventing the Apocalypse? He’s got believers for that sort of thing, or the Army. All Patience wants is to keep a job she actually likes, and avoid falling for her confounding new neighbor, if at all possible. When the Lord enlists said neighbor to convince her to step up, it doesn’t brighten her mood.
Zane Grey Ellison doesn’t particularly want to be a soldier of the Lord either, but he’s keeping an open mind. His world’s been pretty skewed since he abandoned his father’s estate, and his preoccupation with the waitress across the street hasn’t helped him regain his equilibrium. The messages she’s receiving from a text-happy God don’t seem all that much more wondrous to him than his discovery of diner food, or the realization that not every girl in the world can be impressed by a Bugatti Veyron. In fact, if Patience would just stop bickering with the Lord for a minute, he believes they might even get the job done.
Patience fights to keep her sanity as Zane fights to keep the peace, determined not to let the world die—not when it’s just getting good.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Lewis debuts with this irreverent, jumbled comic thriller, in which a young woman is chosen by God to prevent the end of the world. The Lord wants Patience Kelleher to stop the construction of an energy plant that could ultimately destroy all life on Earth, and he's not willing to take no for an answer. Worse, he only communicates by text message. With the aid of her rich bad-boy neighbor, her gun-toting uncle, and God's cryptic commands, Patience embarks on a scheme to discredit a pop singer turned political figure, in the hopes of resolving the issue without bloodshed or grenade launchers. As things go horribly wrong, she must overcome a crisis of faith, open her heart to romance, and cope with God discovering Rickrolling. There's a solid core to this off-kilter tale, but it's undermined by too many disparate elements, wacky twists, and Patience's continuing reluctance to play nice with the Lord and his mysterious ways. A sweet romantic undertone and the entertaining premise don't disguise this story's unfocused, muddled nature.