Meet me in paradise

Libby Hubscher

Book - 2021

"Ever since her journalist mother died on assignment, Marin has played it safe, refusing to set foot outside the state of Tennessee. Her wild-child younger sister, Sadie, has trotted the globe as a photographer, living off of art and adrenaline. When Sadie returns from a tough assignment abroad and looks a little worse for wear, Marin reluctantly agrees to a sisters' spa weekend on the tropical island of Saba. But her lifelong fear of travel is affirmed when Sadie misses the flight, Marin's luggage gets mixed up with another passenger's, and an episode of turbulence sends her hurtling into the lap of Lucas Tsai, the handsome stranger who stole her sister's seat. For the first time in a long time, Marin has to step o...utside of her comfort zone as she explores the island with Lucas and learns what she's been missing out on. With each breathtaking new experience, Marin gets closer to her real self, the man she's falling for, and the heart-wrenching truth about why she's there in the first place"--

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FICTION/Hubscher Libby
0 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor FICTION/Hubscher Libby Due Apr 17, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Romance fiction
Published
New York : Jove 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
Libby Hubscher (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes an excerpt from the author's If you ask me (pages 333-340).
Physical Description
340 pages ; 21cm
ISBN
9780593199428
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

A tropical island vacation does not sound ideal for homebody Marin Cole, but she'll do anything for her younger, globe-trotting sister, Sadie. When their journalist mom died while on assignment during their youth, Marin completely devoted herself to Sadie, but now Sadie wants Marin to experience life at its fullest and live for herself. Sadie plans this sisters' trip for them but then misses the flight, leaving Marin to journey on her own. Marin meets Lucas Tsai, gorgeous hotelier, and as they explore the stunning island of Saba together, Marin opens herself up to new adventures, including scuba diving, karaoke, and possibly falling in love. The idyllic island setting sparkles, but this story isn't all sunny. The characters deal with grief and heartbreak. Debuting author Hubscher gently weaves in the more somber story lines, so readers aren't blindsided yet will still feel the full emotional impact. The romance blooms beautifully, and while there are several complex and endearing secondary characters, this is primarily Marin's story told mostly through her own captivating narrative. Tissues should be on hand.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The Caribbean island of Saba provides the beachy backdrop for Hubscher's beautiful debut, a poignant, emotionally authentic story of sisterly bonds and unexpected love. Marin Cole's younger sister, Sadie, a globe-trotting photojournalist, returns from an assignment looking tired and suggests a restorative sisters' weekend on an island paradise. Marin, who's been overly cautious since the death of their mother 12 years ago, reluctantly agrees, unaware that Sadie has an ulterior motive for the trip: get Marin out of her comfort zone. Sadie pretends to miss their flight, sending Marin off on the adventure without her, having already enlisted the help of Lucas Tsai, owner of the resort they're booked into, to help uptight Marin find the fun by coaxing her into exploring the island. Lucas, who's reeling from the recent death of his father, agrees to Sadie's plan--but he never expected to fall for Marin. Sadie, meanwhile, struggles with health issues she's keeping secret from her sister. The title suggests a breezy island rom-com, but Hubscher doesn't shy from heavy topics, resulting in a story that is as likely to elicit tears as laughter. This is sure to tug at readers' heartstrings. Agent: Sharon Pelletier, Dystel, Goderich & Bourret. (Mar.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

DEBUT When Marin Cole's sister, Sadie, returns from an adventure looking tired, Marin finally gives in to a sisters' weekend at a luxury resort in the Caribbean. Her first time leaving Tennessee turns immediately to disaster when Sadie misses the flight, and turbulence sends her tumbling into the handsome stranger sitting next to her--hotelier Lucas Tsai. When Marin reaches Saba, she learns Sadie never planned on joining her. With Lucas's help and Sadie's prodding from a distance, Marin sets out to conquer her fears and see what the island holds, including the possibility of hooking up with the handsome resort owner. Then Marin learns the real reason Sadie didn't join her was a cancer diagnosis--and that Lucas knew all along. While she reels from the news, Lucas tries to right some of the wrongs, but it may not overcome Marin's feelings of betrayal. VERDICT Hubscher's debut novel is the perfect book for anyone longing for family, travel, and romance. Prepare for some tears mixed with the happy-ever-afters.-- Kellie Tilton, Univ. of Cincinnati Blue Ash

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

One Marin At our mother's funeral, I lost Sadie. One moment she was beside me, shaking hands with strangers who had come to tell us how sorry they were and wax poetic about our mother's appetite for life, the next she was gone. Sadie was like that, in perpetual motion. It never bothered me until that moment, because she hadn't been my responsibility before, but in that cathedral my mother would have detested with all those people who didn't really know us, I suddenly realized that I was the only person Sadie had left. I endured several endless moments in a silent panic, until her shoe struck me on the top of my head. I looked up and found her sitting on one of the oak rafters thirty feet above the crowd of mourners, swinging her legs back and forth like a child on a park bench. I said nothing. I wasn't about to climb up there and, besides, it would have been no use. Sadie didn't march to her own drummer . . . she was a regular one-girl Mannheim Steamroller, and she wouldn't come down until she was good and ready or she became so exhausted she lost consciousness and fell. Until then, all I could do was return to the awkward handshakes and hugs and worries. That was thirteen years ago. I'm thirty now, all grown up and a world-class professional worrier. I don't mind. Not really. For all her antics, Sadie is like the sun, warm and bright and singular. Anxiety is simply the price I pay to orbit around someone like her, someone amazing, who is constantly running off to climb some untamed mountain or photograph a never-before-seen tribe in a remote jungle. She feeds off adventure. I prefer fingernails, nibbling mine down to the quick while I wait for her to come back. Without her, I slog away the days, writing single-line advertising slogans for pet food companies and organic tampons all week. At night, I come home to our empty house and eat salad alone at the kitchen table, then I watch reruns until I fall asleep on the couch. Don't get me wrong. Being Sadie's sister has its upsides, like her sharp wit, her unconditional love, and that wonderful balloon feeling I get in my chest when I know her plane has landed back here in Chattanooga and I could just float away or burst from relief. It's why I always pick her up at the airport, despite her protests. I crave that moment, the one where Sadie's searchlight smile shines through the crowd and finds me. I never go anywhere, but in that moment, it's like I've come home instead of her. And she has no idea. She's too busy trying to keep those unruly blonde curls of hers out of her face as she practically dances her way toward the baggage claim to notice. I lived for that high. And I needed a fix now. Sadie'd been in China for three months-actually ninety-two days, seventeen hours, and forty-one minutes, according to my watch-and I had lost my cuticles and much of my will to live. I'd gotten to the airport earlier than usual, a good forty minutes before her flight was due to arrive, but now an hour had passed and the digital display over the baggage claim showed her flight number. People filtered past me, picked up luggage from the conveyer belt, but Sadie didn't appear. I half expected her to put her hands over my eyes and pretend to be some sort of intriguing stranger like she sometimes had done when I was in college and studying at the library. I checked my phone for the eight hundredth time. "Too busy sexting to notice your own sister?" Sadie. I wrapped my arms around her. "Hey, wild one. I was worried you were never going to get here." "You worried? I can't believe it." She batted her eyelashes at me. "You of all people should know I love a dramatic entrance. Too bad you spoiled the whole thing by staring at your phone." I drew in a relieved breath. Sadie sounded like Sadie. A little hoarse from the dry air on the plane, maybe, but her sense of humor was intact. I stepped back and looked at her. She'd felt strange in my arms, like part of her was still on the plane, and now I saw why. She was thinner. Her usually cherubic face looked drawn. "Jesus, Sadie, did you not eat or sleep in China? You look like shit." "Wow, thanks, Marin. You're so kind. You look fantastic too, by the way." She snatched up one of my hands and examined it. "I love this new manicure you're rocking. What's it called, the Anxious Gnaw?" I reclaimed my hand. "Point taken. I thought you were going to some sacred temple to take pictures of monks. What was it called again?" "Guangzhou Fuda." "Right. That was it. I guess I just didn't realize you'd be roughing it this trip." "That's one way of putting it." "You can tell me more about it later. Let's grab your bag and get you home. Nothing a nap and a good meal won't fix, right?" Sadie gave me a tight-lipped smile and nodded. "Right." In the passenger seat, Sadie dozed off minutes into our ride home. I tried to remember how she looked after she'd climbed Kangchenjunga for that eco-extreme feature last year. Probably the same. When we got to the house, I carried her duffel bag inside for her while she slept in the driveway. "Sadie," I said, and unbuckled her seat belt. "We're home." She rubbed her eyes. "Sorry. My body clock is totally off. What time is it anyway?" "Noon." "It's one a.m. in China right now." "I forgot about the time difference. I thought maybe you were coming down with something." Sadie shook her head and yawned. She followed me into the house and dropped onto the couch. "Home sweet home." "I put your bag in the laundry room. There's some take-out menus on the coffee table. I was thinking barbecue, but you can pick." Sadie touched the menus, but she didn't pick them up. "I'm not really hungry. To me, it's still the middle of the night." I snatched the Dave's BBQ menu up and headed toward the phone. Sure, her stomach was on Shanghai time or whatever, but knowing Sadie, there was no way she was going to turn down ribs when they were sitting right in front of her. "I get it," I told her as I dialed. "Do you mind if I eat, though? I had to go into the office early to finish up a pitch for a new luxury pet accessory brand and skipped breakfast. I'm starving." When the food arrived thirty minutes later, I arranged it like a Tennessee wedding banquet on the coffee table. I even got out Mom's good china that we only used for special occasions. The ribs were still steaming, sending sweet, spicy scented notes into the air. I eyed Sadie, waiting for the telltale nostril flare that would happen right before she grabbed the entire Styrofoam box and claimed it as her own, like some kind of ravenous alpha she-wolf. "I'll be back," she said, and climbed off the couch. "Where are you going?" I asked. Sadie was walking away from ribs? "Bathroom." I sat on the couch in front of enough food to feed a football team, perplexed. Sadie never turned down Dave's. Not at noon, not at midnight. Never. We always joked that she had multiple stomachs. One was always on call. I remembered reading something while I was on one of my insomnia-driven research binges, that in China you have to drink boiled or bottled water. Maybe she hadn't followed that rule? Next to me, Sadie's phone buzzed on the cushion. I picked it up. A text message flashed across the screen. It was from Jessica, the senior editor at the magazine. I didn't mean to read it, but Sadie and I didn't have secrets. Jessica had kept it short. Her text read: Let me know if there's anything I can do. Weird. Anything she could do, what was that all about? I stared at the screen for a moment. "Maybe I'll have some of that brisket," Sadie said. I dropped the phone. "Great." I picked up her computer and put it down in the middle of the buffet. "I charged your laptop-how about a Sadie Slideshow while we eat?" The screen came on and there was a picture of a man. He was bald, with tan, shriveled skin, like a peach left too long in the sun. Still, he was smiling. "Maybe later," Sadie said, closing the laptop. "I haven't had a chance to cull yet." She grasped a small piece of brisket between her fingers and placed it on her tongue. "What? I had my hands full." "Was he one of the monks?" "He was someone I met at Fuda." I waited for her to elaborate. She always had such great stories about her subjects, but she was too busy dissecting another piece of meat with her fingertips. "Are you sure everything's okay?" I said. "No. Everything is not okay. There's not even close to enough barbecue sauce on this. Dave's off his game." "I meant with you." She waved a hand at me before dumping an entire container of barbecue sauce over the meat in front of her. "You worry too much." "I know I do. It's just one of the areas in which I excel," I said. My anxiety was almost a running joke between us, except when it wasn't. I turned my attention to the tub of coleslaw and started making a mountain on my plate. "Did something happen in China? You can tell me. I promise not to freak out." "Nope," she said. "Nada. Zilch. L'ng. I picked up a little Mandarin, does that count? Turns out you're not the only brainiac in the family." "That's great." I smushed the coleslaw mountain with my fork. "I just wonder if you could use a little break from all this crazy travel and these hard-core assignments." She shrugged. "I love that stuff." "I know you do. But you've been on the road all year . . . Peru, then Canada, now China for months. You barely had time to call, and when you did, it was like five minutes. And"-I chose my words carefully-"you have to admit you look a little run-down." "You've got me there. I am a little tired. And I'm sorry. I love my work, but I love you too. And I missed you, Mar, even if I'm a shit who doesn't video call as often as I should to let you know that." Sadie was quiet for a long time. She poked at the brisket on her plate. "Tell you what, let's take a long weekend somewhere warm and beautiful and relaxing, just you and me. We can get massages and bankrupt the all-you-can-eat buffets. I'm thinking froufrou drinks on a beach and meaningless sex with pool boys." "Since when have you ever known me to do any of those things?" I asked. She gave me a look. "Please. I know you and Ted used to get it on. It's a small house. Good acoustics." She gave an exaggerated gasp. "Is it possible that it's been so long you've forgotten?" "Not all of us are as libidinous as you. And besides, Ted and I were in a serious relationship. It wasn't meaningless." "Fine. Come with me and have meaningful sex with pool boys. It's just what the doctor ordered . . . Or, Jessica had said something about another assignment for me. What was it . . . hmm . . . Russia maybe, no . . ." Sadie tipped her head to the side. She was really milking this. She tapped her forehead. "Not Venezuela. Oh! I remember now, Papua New Guinea. You know, small island near Australia. Ever heard of it?" "You're messing with me." Sadie shook her head. "Would I do that? Nope. Three months with a tribe in the highlands. And snakes. Lots of bad ones there. So much venom." Maybe it was envisioning Sadie surrounded by a slew of venomous jungle creatures, but I caved, faster than I'd like to admit. "Fine." She flashed me one of her famous exaggerated expressions; this one I titled "complete shock plus palpitations" based on the drop of her jaw and the hand on her heart. "Marin Cole," she said. "Did you just agree to a beach trip?" "What can I say?" I told her as I put my arm around her shoulder and pulled her toward me. "You are a force that is futile to resist, Sis." She bumped me with her shoulder and said, "Don't you worry about a thing. It's going to be perfect. Just leave the whole thing to me." I didn't know what I'd been thinking earlier; she was the same old Sadie. The mischievous glint was back in her eyes. "Famous last words," I said. "Pass the hush puppies." Two Sadie I guess I should start with why did I plan this? I'll tell you a story. One time, when I was in high school, our house caught on fire. I can't remember what caused the fire exactly-a faulty wire, a shorted-out kitchen appliance, me leaving a pot of my famous sauerkraut soup cooking on the stove overnight-it's not important. My older sister, Marin, woke up to the shriek of the alarm and a smoke-filled hallway. She's always been a light sleeper. I, on the other hand, could sleep through the apocalypse. It's practically a superpower of mine. My memory of the fire is just shreds of moments, tiny recollections here and there. Pain in my arms. Marin's upside-down face streaked with black. Her robe on my cheek. How cold the air was outside. Flashes of red light. The things we had to throw away because of the water and smoke damage, pictures of Mom that we couldn't replace. We never talked about it. For Marin, talking about her death made it more real. I only knew what happened because a firefighter told me. I slept through the whole thing. If Marin hadn't gotten me out, I wouldn't have made it. She saved me. I was asleep and in trouble and she dragged me out. All this to say, this is my way of dragging her out. Marin's been sleeping for a long time, and our house is on fire. Three Marin The entire population of Chattanooga was at the airport, everyone, that is, except for Sadie. In classic form, something had come up at the last minute and she'd promised to get a cab. For the past half hour, I'd been scanning the crowd, tapping my boarding pass in my hand, and checking the time on my phone on repeat-in that order. And now, our flight was due to start boarding any minute. This wasn't fashionably late, this was missing-the-flight-without-a-miracle late. Of course, I'd insisted on being at the airport the recommended two and a half hours early. Sadie, on the other hand, still hadn't completely unpacked from China. None of this was surprising. She was the spontaneous, carefree yang to my admittedly uptight yin. Somebody had to keep shit together. Excerpted from Meet Me in Paradise by Libby Hubscher 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.