Take it from me A novel

Jamie Beck

Book - 2022

Wendy Moore hides her collection of pilfered bric-a-brac from everyone, including her husband. He thinks she licked her kleptomania in therapy more than a decade ago. Therapy did help, as did focusing her attention on motherhood. But now Wendy's gardening and furniture-refinishing hobbies fill up only so much of the day, leaving the recent empty nester lonely and anxious--a combination likely to trigger her little problem. She needs a project, fast. Luckily, Harper Ross--a single, childless younger woman in desperate need of highlights--just moved in next door. The only thing Harper wants to change is the writer's block toppling her confidence and career. Then a muse comes knocking. Sensing fodder for a new antagonist, Harper pla...ys along with Wendy's "helpful" advice while keeping her career a secret so Wendy keeps talking. Sure, she's torn about profiting off her neighbor's goodwill--especially when Wendy's matchmaking actually pans out--but Harper's novel is practically writing itself. Just as a real friendship begins to cement, their deceptions come to light, threatening Wendy's and Harper's futures and forcing them to reconcile who they are with who they want to be. Easier said than done."--

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Subjects
Published
Seattle : Montlake [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Jamie Beck (author)
Physical Description
332 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781542032391
Contents unavailable.
Review by Library Journal Review

Novelist Harper Ross's first two books met with acclaim, but her third did not. Struggling with writer's block and afraid that she's lost her talent, she sells her Manhattan condo and rents a house in the Connecticut suburbs. She hopes that the fresh start in a new locale will give her the impetus she needs to write a better book. Empty nester Wendy Moore lives nearby; she doesn't have many friends, and she has a secret: she suffers from a mental illness, which is handled with sensitivity here. The two women meet and form a friendship of sorts, except Harper is using Wendy as inspiration for her new book and is lying about her occupation. Wendy is happy to have a new friend, especially a younger woman she can mother a bit and act as a matchmaker for as well. When all the secrets come out, the friendship is strained beyond repair, or so it seems. VERDICT Many women will see aspects of themselves here in this relatable women's fiction from Beck (The Happy Accidents). It should appeal to book clubs and readers who enjoy books by Danielle Steel or Kristin Hannah.--Stacy Alesi

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