Before We Forget Kindness
A Novel
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
In the fifth book in the sensational, cozy Before the Coffee Gets Cold series translated from Japanese, the mysterious café where customers arrive hoping to travel back in time welcomes four new guests:
The father who could not allow his daughter to get married A woman who couldn't give Valentine's Day chocolates to her loved one A boy who wants to show his smile to his divorced parents A wife holding a child with no name . . .
They must follow the café's strict rules, however, and come back to the present before their coffee goes cold. Another moving and heartwarming tale from Toshikazu Kawaguchi, in Before we forget kindness our new visitors wish to go back into their past to move on their present, finding closure and comfort so they can embark on a beautiful future.
Catch up on the rest of the captivating Before the Coffee Gets Cold series: Before the Coffee Gets Cold Tales from the Cafe Before Your Memory Fades Before We Say Goodbye
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The gentle but poignant fifth light fantasy in Kawaguchi's Before the Coffee Gets Cold series (after Before We Say Goodbye) returns to Tokyo's Café Funiculi Funicula. Run by the Tokita family, this otherwise unassuming café has one major draw: any customer who sits in one particular seat can travel in time, as long as they return before their cup of coffee gets cold. Each series installment comprises stories following different customers and the people with whom they hope to have one last conversation. This time around, readers meet a young boy trying to come to terms with his parents' divorce ("The Son"); a new mother whose husband was killed before he could meet and name their infant daughter ("The Nameless Child"); a woman who eloped without her father's blessing and now needs his forgiveness ("The Father"); and two best friends driven apart by painful romantic secrets ("The Valentine"). The focus on regret and grief makes this a heart-wrenching outing, but kindness and empathy still shine through in Kawaguchi's characters. Readers will find comfort even as they reach for the tissues.