BOOK DISCUSSION DATE AND TIME: MONDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2014 AT 1:00 PM
DISCUSSION LEADER: EDNA RITZENBERG
Taking a job as an assistant to extreme sports enthusiast Will, who is wheelchair bound after a motorcycle accident, Louisa struggles with her employer's acerbic moods and learns of his shocking plans before demonstrating to him that life is still worth living.
BookList:
In The Last Letter from Your Lover (2011), Moyes
presented a heavily plotted novel that spanned decades and featured
parallel romances. Her newest work dials down the intricacy, and the
result is a far more intimate novel. Moyes introduces us first to Will
Traynor, a formerly high-flying, thrill-seeking executive now confined
to a wheelchair as a quadriplegic. Twentysomething Louisa “Lou” Clark
has been hired as his caretaker, despite a total lack of experience. As
the prickly Will and plainspoken Lou gradually warm to each other, she
learns that the six-month length of her contract coincides with the
amount of time Will has agreed, for his parents’ sake, to postpone his
planned assisted suicide, a subject Moyes treats evenhandedly. Armed
with this information, Lou sets about creating adventures for Will,
hoping to give him a reason to live. Simultaneously, Will encourages Lou
to expand the expectations of what her life could be. All signs point
to romance and a happy ending for the pair, but Moyes has something more
heartbreakingly truthful in mind: Sometimes love isn’t enough. --
Wetli, Patty (Reviewed 11-15-2012) (Booklist, vol 109, number 6, p20)
Publishers Weekly:
/* Starred Review */ In Moyes’s (The Last Letter from
Your Lover) disarmingly moving love story, Louisa Clark leads a routine
existence: at 26, she’s dully content with her job at the cafe in her
small English town and with Patrick, her boyfriend of six years. But
when the cafe closes, a job caring for a recently paralyzed man offers
Lou better pay and, despite her lack of experience, she’s hired. Lou’s
charge, Will Traynor, suffered a spinal cord injury when hit by a
motorcycle and his raw frustration with quadriplegia makes the job
almost unbearable for Lou. Will is quick-witted and sardonic, a
powerhouse of a man in his former life (motorcycles; sky diving;
important career in global business). While the two engage in occasional
banter, Lou at first stays on only for the sake of her family, who
desperately needs the money. But when she discovers that Will intends to
end his own life, Lou makes it her mission to persuade him that life is
still worth living. In the process of planning “adventures” like trips
to the horse track—some of which illuminate Lou’s own minor failings—Lou
begins to understand the extent of Will’s isolation; meanwhile, Will
introduces Lou to ideas outside of her small existence. The end result
is a lovely novel, both nontraditional and enthralling. Agent: Sheila
Crowley, Curtis Brown. (Dec.) --Staff (Reviewed October 8, 2012)
(Publishers Weekly, vol 259, issue 41, p)
Kirkus:
A young woman finds herself while caring for an
embittered quadriplegic in this second novel from British author Moyes
(The Last Letter from Your Lover, 2011). Louisa has no apparent
ambitions. At 26, she lives with her working-class family (portrayed
with rollicking energy) in a small English town, carries on a ho-hum
relationship with her dull boyfriend and works at a local cafe. Then,
the cafe closes, and she must find a job fast to ease her family's
financial stress. Enter Will Traynor, a former world traveler, ladies'
man and business tycoon who's been a quadriplegic since a traffic
accident two years ago. Will's magistrate mother hires Louisa at a
relatively hefty salary to be Will's caregiver and keep him company for
the next six months--easygoing Nathan gives him his medical care and
physiotherapy--but really Will's mother wants Louisa to watch him so he
doesn't try to hurt himself. Will, once handsome and powerful, is not
only embittered, but in constant pain. He has some use of one hand but
is dependent on others for his basic needs, and recovery is not
possible. Louisa, who can't help speaking her mind and dresses
thrift-store eccentric, thinks he hates her, but no surprise, Louisa's
sprightly, no-nonsense charms win him over. He even cheers her up on
occasion. When Louisa overhears Will's mother talking to his sister, she
realizes that the Traynors have reluctantly agreed to let Will commit
suicide at a facility in six months. Louisa decides to convince him to
stay alive with a series of adventures. Meanwhile, Will, who senses
something in her past has made Louisa fearful of adventure, is trying to
broaden her experience through classical music and books. Their
feelings for each other deepen. But Louisa is not Jane Eyre, and Will is
not Mr. Rochester in a wheelchair, so don't expect an easy romantic
ending. Despite some obviousness in the storyline, this is uplift
fiction at its best, with fully drawn characters making difficult
choices.(Kirkus Reviews, November 1, 2012)
No comments:
Post a Comment