The island house A novel

Nancy Thayer, 1943-

Book - 2016

"Every summer since college, twenty-nine-year-old Courtney has traded the familiarity of the Midwest for the allure of Nantucket. Now an established university professor, she finds herself caught between two lifestyles and two very different men. This summer has taken an unexpected turn and now she must decide what she really wants"--

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LARGE PRINT/FICTION/Thayer, Nancy
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Subjects
Genres
Romance fiction
Published
Thorndike, Maine : Center Point Large Print 2016.
Language
English
Main Author
Nancy Thayer, 1943- (author)
Edition
Center Point Large Print edition
Item Description
Originally published: New York : Ballantine Books, 2016.
Physical Description
416 pages (large print) ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781683240198
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Courtney Hendricks is looking forward to another summer on Nantucket with her summer family, the fabulously relatable Vickerys. Warm matriarch Susanna and her brilliant surgeon husband have four adult children. Courtney is reeling from a marriage proposal from her childhood friend, hunky Kansas rancher Monty Blackhorse, and she needs the steady presence of her best friend, Robin Vickery, who has spent her postcollege years in unambitious domestic bliss with her parents. Courtney is still carrying a major torch for Robin's brother James, and she thought James felt the same, but he spends too much time with a beautiful islander to know for sure. There's more: the eldest son, Henry, falls into his bipolar disorder just as his mother's sixtieth birthday party and a houseful of guests arrives, and steady Robin has secrets of her own. Some of the almost-30-year-old narrators have a penchant for outdated language (groovy is thrown about without irony), but that doesn't make the book any less absorbing. Thayer's Nantucket books are sure bets for the beach, and this is no exception.--Maguire, Susan Copyright 2016 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

1 Courtney always took the slow ferry to Nantucket at the beginning of the summer. It was a sort of ritual for her, watching Hyannis with its docks, wharves, beach houses, and sailboats slide slowly into the background until the ship was surrounded by water, with no land in sight. It was the gentle disconnecting from the mainland that made it possible for her to let go of the real world and everything it contained. For two hours, she would sit at a window, staring out at the infinite blue sea, its white-­tipped waves, its oddly serene seabirds bobbing blithely so far from land, and in the distance, like a child's first drawing, a fishing trawler sputtering along with its nets sinking down and down into the mysterious watery unknown. Suddenly, Courtney would catch a glimmer along the horizon. Low and flat, it shimmered like a mirage, and as the steamship Nantucket rumbled along, an intense point of light would flash and disappear, flash and disappear--­the first sign of Nantucket, the Great Point Light. As soon as she spotted this, Courtney would rise from her seat, walk down the aisle and push her way out through the heavy door to the bow. Here the wind whipped her hair into her face and the sun shone into her eyes and the air smelled of salt. She was almost there, and she wanted to be alert and watchful, to feel herself being borne closer and closer to the island she loved. She was standing on the deck now, scanning the horizon for landmarks--­the water tower, the cluster of rainbow sailboats daringly leaving the harbor, the buoys. This year, this summer--­this would be a time she would always remember. She was sure of that. "Have you been to the island before?" An older woman had come to join her, and stood next to her, her age-­marked hands holding tight to the railing. "Yes, several times, actually, for about ten years," Courtney replied. "And you?" The deeply tanned creases of the woman's face readjusted themselves as she smiled. "Growing up, my family summered here. My parents left me their house, and my husband and children and I summered here. This summer our grandchildren are visiting." "How lucky you are," Courtney said wistfully. She wanted what this woman had, she wanted to marry the man she loved and raise a great pack of children on the island. The woman studied Courtney. "And where do you stay when you're here?" Courtney paused before admitting, "With the Vickereys on the cliff." "The Vickereys!" The woman stood back a pace, the better to scan Courtney up and down, appraising her. "Are you a Vickerey?" "No, no," Courtney hurriedly assured her. "I went to school with Robin Vickerey. We were roommates at Smith, became good friends, and I've just fallen into the habit of visiting a lot." Even as she spoke the words, Courtney could hear the style, the blasé cadence of the Vickerey family: I've just fallen into the habit . . . As if she were one of the Vickereys and belonged in that enormous rambling house as part of their accomplished, complicated, turbulent, family. The older woman arched an eyebrow. "I'd say you're lucky, too, then. You're one of Susanna Vickerey's summer children." Summer children: that was what Susanna called her four children's best friends who spent every summer in the Vickerey home, even though those "children" were adults and had been for years. "Yes," Courtney agreed happily. "I am." The first summer Courtney Hendricks spent on Nantucket, she was eighteen years old, a naïve, book-­smart optimist who didn't know what the world would throw at her but was sure she could handle it. And after all, look at what had happened: even though she was from little ol' Emporia, Kansas, she'd been accepted by one of the finest women's colleges, Smith College, in Massachusetts. Even better, best of all, her roommate was Robin Vickerey, who became Courtney's dearest friend. Robin had long flaming red hair that curled like party ribbon and green eyes and adorable freckles spattered across her nose. With looks like that, you'd think she'd be kind of wild, but Robin was cool, calm, and collected, a quiet, studious, organized person who was a gem at stopping quarrels in the dorm. Robin and Courtney had become friends immediately. They shared the same sensibility. They were truly engrossed with their studies. They weren't geeks, but they didn't do quite as many stupid things as the other girls in their dorm. Courtney knew she was considered a goody-­goody, which she probably was. She assumed her Midwestern upbringing was responsible for that, so she was surprised to find the same kind of careful, helpful, Girl Scoutish attitude in Robin. After she came to know the entire Vickerey family, she understood why. On a long spring weekend of their freshman year, Robin had invited Courtney to her home on Nantucket. She'd mentioned that summer jobs as retail clerks, waitstaff, and landscapers paid outstanding money and Courtney wanted to check it out. Courtney's parents did all right for themselves--­her father owned a pharmacy for which her mother did the books. But Courtney wanted to help soften the blow of college tuition and expenses. She'd worked after school and on weekends in Emporia--­why not work on Nantucket, where the pay was so much better? So she went along with Robin. They caught a ride to the Cape, took the fast ferry to Nantucket, and Susanna Vickerey, Robin's mother, met them at the boat and drove them out to 'Sconset. When Courtney first saw where the Vickereys lived, she was dazzled. Anybody would be. It was a huge old house with lots of bedrooms, set on a bluff overlooking the Atlantic Ocean. Dr. Vickerey was a surgeon in Boston; the Vickereys kept an apartment in the Back Bay, but the family home was Nantucket. They had four children, and their house was always jam-­packed to its literal rafters with friends. The mother, Susanna, liked it that way. She said it filled her soul to have guests around. She called some of the guests her "summer children," even after they turned twenty-­one. "Stay for the summer," Robin had coaxed Courtney. "There's always room for one more." Courtney had gone into town that Saturday afternoon and looked around. The town was sweet and old-­fashioned yet had excellent restaurants with famous chefs and fabulous clothing stores. Lots of places needed summer help. She talked to her parents, her parents talked to Robin's parents, and it was agreed. She went for the first summer and fit right in. She borrowed one of the Vickereys' bikes for the ride to work and back. On rainy days, someone was always in the house and willing to drive her into town. On her days off, she went to the beach with Robin. Some nights, when the moon was full and the breeze was inviting, she and Robin wandered down to the beach parties. They drank some, but not much; it didn't interest them. During those years they were just as interested in curling up with a good book on their time off as partying. Or simply staying at home, lounging on the back patio, drinking lemonade, having easy lazy conversations and watching the white curtains flutter as the sea breezes blew through the open windows of the marvelous great house. That first summer was eleven years ago. Courtney had come here every summer since then. In many ways, Nantucket felt like her second home. She had graduated from college and come here to work for the summer. She had gone to grad school in Boston for a master's in English literature and come here to work for the summer. She'd gotten a job at UMKC teaching English lit and composition, and still, as an adult, for five more summers, she had returned to this island, this house, this family. She told her parents and Kansas friends it was because she made so much money working summers in Nantucket. But this year making money wasn't enough of a reason for her to continue to go back East. Thank heavens it was Susanna Vickerey's sixtieth birthday. Courtney had to be there for that. The Vickereys were throwing a huge party, and Susanna had been so wonderful to Courtney for so many years. But even the party wasn't the real reason. James Vickerey was the real reason. Courtney had been in love with him since she first met him eleven years ago. Since everyone in the Vickerey family seemed to know, share, and have opinions--­which they discussed openly at the dinner table--­about everyone else's secrets, Courtney had kept her feelings fiercely private. Not even Robin knew. Courtney seldom saw James, anyway. She was always working and James was often gone, backpacking in Europe when he was in college, working with a techie start-­up group in Boston after graduation. But last year . . . Courtney gripped the ship's railing. After what happened between them last year, she knew she had to return to the island for one more summer. She hadn't expected Monty Blackhorse to add to her confusion. You would think, Courtney thought, that a woman as versed in literature as Courtney would not be surprised by anything that happened between a man and a woman. You would think that any woman, no matter what she did, couldn't be shocked by any man if she had grown up with a father, a brother, and a male best friend. On the other hand, on the spectrum of men and emotions, Courtney's father and brother were way over on the placid-­headed-­for-­comatose end. They were strong, silent men. Not mysterious. Just silent. Her father was a gruff man's man who came home from his pharmacy expecting dinner on the table and the television tuned to some kind of game--­football, baseball, hockey--­he'd even watch the fishing channel if necessary. Her brother, Donnie, was five years older, a pharmacist working with their father and planning to take over the family business someday. He was obsessed with Legos when they were small, and as Courtney became a lover of books and literature and what Donnie called "fussy stuff," what little interest Donnie had in her faded away. Now that he was a father, he'd softened a bit, but his children were both boys whose favorite video was of monster trucks in muddy fields. And Monty, her best Kansas male friend, had never done anything that shocked her in all the sixteen years since that first day she met him when she was trespassing on his property. For her thirteenth birthday--­her admittance into adolescence, although she'd tried to convince her parents she was an adolescent the moment she hit double digits--­her parents had given in and bought her a horse of her own. Star was a buckskin mare with a white star between her eyes. They boarded her at the Schmidts' ranch, so until she got her own car at sixteen, she had to bike out there unless she could catch a ride. She could usually pester Donnie into driving her. Her birthday was in early May. That first summer, she had the entire summer stretching before her, day after delicious day of riding. The first time she rode Star on the Schmidts' land, Courtney entered the stable, Star's new home, and smooth-­talked and gentled the horse as she put on the blanket and saddle. Star stood at seventeen hands. Courtney might have appreciated a stepladder, but she wasn't going to admit it. Awkwardly, she got herself up onto the gracious old roping saddle. It was padded, with wide leather stirrups, a rocking chair of a seat. Courtney had kept Star at a gentle trot as they explored the Schmidts' pasture, getting to know the horse, sensing how she and this horse were going to take to each other. She'd ridden Star before, and liked her, but the horse was in a new stable, and horses could be quirky. Still, Star was seven years old. She seemed easygoing and content, no kind of diva. The next time Courtney hoisted herself up into the saddle, she relaxed a bit. Beneath her, Star nickered and fidgeted, clearly announcing that she was bored. Courtney nudged the buckskin horse with her knees and dug her heels into Star's sides, and they were off, galloping over a shimmering sea of sweet green grass. Never in her life, Courtney thought, would she experience anything to top the sheer soul-­soaring joy of galloping across a field on the back of this horse. She and Star became one creature, united by speed, motion, bliss, and on Courtney's part, a thrilling smidgen of terror. Star loved to run, and Courtney let her have her head. She felt the huffing of the huge animal's lungs beneath her, the silken glide of the powerful muscles carrying her. In the distance, she spotted a stand of cottonwood trees. Easily jumping over a fallen white rail fence, she headed Star in their direction. As they drew closer, she saw a narrow creek winding along just a few feet from the trees. It was shady there, and Courtney was glad, because even with the temperature only in the low eighties, her clothes were sweat-­soaked from the ride. When they reached it, she reined Star in, took a moment to lean forward and pet her and whisper endearments to her. Her horse muttered and tossed her head, white saliva flying. Courtney dismounted and held the reins in her hand as Star drank from the creek. Excerpted from The Island House by Nancy Thayer All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.