The Other Life
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3.5 • 35 Ratings
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- $5.99
Publisher Description
If you could return to the road not taken...would you?
Quinn Braverman has a perfect life, with a loving husband, an adorable son, and another baby on the way. But she also has an ominous secret: she knows that another version of her life exists...one in which she made totally different life choices. But she's never been tempted to switch lives—until a shocking turn of events pushes her to cross over, and she discovers the one person she thought she'd lost forever: Her mother.
But Quinn can't have both lives. Soon, she must decide which she really wants—the one she has...or the other life...
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Meister (Secret Confessions of the Applewood PTA) ineffectively tackles the question of what one would do if it were possible to choose the path not taken. When 36-year-old Quinn Braverman, a happily married mother of a six-year-old boy, learns that her unborn daughter has a potentially fatal brain abnormality, she's overcome with the desire to just let her own life wash away. As a child, Quinn discovered she could float from one life to another through portals. In the laundry room of her Long Island home, Quinn has found such a gateway in a crack in the wall and decides to go back to the glitzy life she could have led if she had not left her neurotic ex-boyfriend for her husband. In this other life, she can also seek the comforts of her mother, who, in Quinn's current state of being, killed herself as a result of depression. Quinn repeatedly chooses to go back to her "what if" life, knowing that leaving her son and husband behind could emotionally scar them forever. Quinn's selfishness overshadows any sympathy to be had for her character.
Customer Reviews
Well written
This book felt genuine peopled with folks that you can like and empathize with their oh too human flaws and quirks. The portal to a parallel life aspect is fascinating. Leaving the ending the way that she did, I felt honored the reader's intelligence. It may not be what I thought I would be reading on the beach in Belize, but it certainly held my interest and I liked it.
The other life
I'm giving this book one star because I finished it. Lots of cliches, cardboard characters, sentimental, superficial treatment of deep problems. yikes!