Summer at Willow Lake
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- £0.99
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- £0.99
Publisher Description
Summertime begins with a Susan Wiggs
Olivia Bellamy has traded her trendy Manhattan life for a summer renovating her family’s crumbling holiday resort. Tempted by the hazy, nostalgic memories of summers past – childhood innocence and the romance and rivalries of her teens – it’s the perfect place to flee after her broken engagement.
But what began as an escape may just be a new beginning…
As Olivia uncovers secrets buried thick with dust, one by one her family return, their lives as frayed at the edges as the resort. Her father and the mystery woman in the tatty black and white photograph. Uncle John, who's trying to be a father again to his teenage kids. Connor Davis, the first love she never forgot.
Laughter is ringing around Willow Lake once more.
This could be Olivia's summer of a lifetime!
Perfect for fans of Cathy Kelly
Reviews
'Susan Wiggs paints the details of human relationships with the finesse of a master' – Jodi Picoult
'Truly uplifting' –Now magazine
'irresistibly good' –Closer
About the author
Susan Wiggs is the author of many beloved bestsellers, including the popular Lakeshore Chronicles series. She has won many awards for her work, including a RITA from Romance Writers of America. Visit her website at www.SusanWiggs.com.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The latest contemporary from Wiggs (Table for Five) is a quiet, character-based romance set at the Catskills camp that Olivia Bellamy is renovating for her grandparents' 50th anniversary. Helping out is contractor Connor Davis, who initially doesn't recognize Olivia as the girl whose heart he broke a decade before at the very same camp. Now, both hold grudges against the other that hide their insecurities; although he's become successful and sophisticated, Connor believes Olivia's social status puts her out of his league, while Olivia remains buried in her awkward-little-fat-girl memories. The narrative switches off between present-day action and the summers Olivia and Connor spent at Camp Kioga, filling in the spaces of their relationship with each other and with their dysfunctional families. Wiggs's storytelling is heartwarming, but avoids schmaltz, and her chick-lit ready leads seem older than their 20-some years, adding weight to their stories. Happily clutter free no subplots to take attention away from the intelligent, appealing couple this book, first in a series, should appeal to romance and women's fiction readers of any age.