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A spellbinding tale of unexpected romance and drama from the No.1 bestseller
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- 8,99 €
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- 8,99 €
Descrizione dell’editore
What do you do when life gives you everything you wanted, twenty years too late?
At fifty-nine, Jack owns a successful boutique in Beverley Hills and has two wonderful grown-up children, as well as his choice of Hollywood's most beautiful women.
After his marriage failed, Jack became the perfect bachelor. He loves his life.
When Amanda becomes a widow after twenty-six years of marriage, she finds herself on unfamiliar ground. She knows Jack only as her daughter's father-in-law, an incurable playboy whom she dislikes intensely. So she is surprised to find herself befriended by - and attracted to - him.
Worse still, it turns out she likes him.
Suddenly, Jack and Amanda are faced with an unexpected gift that neither thought possible. They feel young again and find happiness despite the obstacles and opposition around them . . .
In her bestselling novel, Danielle Steel makes us laugh and cry as she touches the heart with tenderness and accuracy.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
To the many women in Beverly Hills playboy Jack Watson's life, "Everything about him was irresistibly charming, even the way he left them." Teetering on the cusp of 60, however, the former Hollywood actor and producer, now a retailer, has sworn off serious relationships for good. Amanda Robbins Kingston, whose daughter is married to Jack's son, can't stand Jack. But a year after Amanda's overprotective husband dies, Jack and Amanda meet again at a Christmas party and embark on a romance. As this thin tale of second-chance love proves abundantly, time neither dulls nor deepens the passions of Steel's characters: these grownups simply don't grow up. Amanda's self-recriminations about the match (and the self-righteous objections of her daughter and son-in-law) are tiresome, and there's not a surprise in sight, since Amanda's autumnal pregnancy feels as inevitable as it is contrived. Worse, Steel's ambivalence toward real-life aging will almost certainly alienate some readers. The lovers' bodies are both, improbably, "splendid," and (right after Jack's throwaway comment that L.A.'s beautiful people "make the ugly people move to some other state") Steel fans in the homely 49 may not always agree that "It was easy to see why he had so much success with women." The happy ending is never in doubt, but the formula is starting to look tired (not to say "old") and a little sad.