Review by Booklist Review
Even though Dani Cambell is the hottest photographer in the Manhattan art scene, she is worried about how to stay on top. While taking pictures in a barn full of antiques, she finds old photos that bring tears to her eyes, and she realizes her work is missing something and she must find "it". After a long search for the photographer, she finds herself at an old beach house and face-to-face with Lawrence Sinclair. Lawrence is isolated from his family and does not want to mentor Dani, but after she agrees to his outlandish requirements, including high rent and cooking and cleaning duties, she finds a way under his roof and eventually into his heart. The mentorship grows into a genuine friendship and all seems well until Lawrence's grandson Peter visits. Peter, while trying to reconnect with his grandfather, also wants Dani out, until Lawrence pushes them to see that they have plenty in common. Readers of Carley Fortune will enjoy Noble's latest (after the historical The Tiffany Girls, 2023).
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
An up-and-coming Manhattan photographer finds inspiration from an aging recluse in this cozy contemporary from Noble (The Tiffany Girls). When 28-year-old Dani Campbell, a rising star of the art world, discovers some profoundly moving photographs at an antique barn, she becomes determined to track down the man who took them, hoping he'll teach her how to capture the spark she feels is missing from her own work. Her search leads her to Lawrence Sinclair, who blames the dissolution of his family on his long-since abandoned art career and now lives alone in a ramshackle Rhode Island mansion. Dani becomes a temporary boarder in Lawrence's crumbling home, cleaning and cooking in exchange for his reluctant tutelage. Improving her photography skills isn't the only advantage to this setup: it also introduces her to Lawrence's estranged grandson, Peter, a lawyer for the family business whose arrival at Lawrence's house is complicated by past tensions and Peter's unhappiness with the career path his mother has picked for him. Dani faces her own career choices, conflicted in her desire to succeed in the New York art world and the sense of belonging she's found in small-town life. All three protagonists feel emotionally authentic and their search for happiness despite past mistakes rings true. The result is utterly heartwarming. Agent: Kevan Lyon, Marsal Lyon Literary. (Sept.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
An up-and-coming New York photographer seeks out a mentor who had his heyday decades before. Twenty-eight-year-old Dani Campbell has it made as a photographer. With an agent who finds her ever-more-lucrative projects to work on, she's raking in the money, but she feels that something is missing from her art. When, in an antiques shop, she stumbles across an envelope of forgotten photos taken by a man named Lawrence Sinclair, she realizes that he has exactly what she's missing, even if she doesn't know what it is. And as the daughter of a couple who run a bar in Brooklyn, she doesn't take her position--or income--for granted. She decides to seek Lawrence out to help her discover what's missing in her art. When she tracks him down in Old Murphy Beach, Rhode Island, she finds a grumpy, bitter old man living in a ramshackle, dilapidated monster of a house. She convinces him to take her money for room and board--$800 dollars a week is what they settle on--and to mentor her. While she thinks he's poor, what she doesn't know is that he's let everything fall down around him because of his bitterness at losing everything that mattered to him--his wife, Krista; his son, Elliott; and his grandson, Peter. She also doesn't know that he's an extremely wealthy man from an extremely wealthy family. As the days pass and he helps her rediscover her eye, a number of events transpire: The nuns next door are losing their convent and must find a new location to run their arts school; Peter reappears after a long estrangement, struggling with his place in the family empire, and Dani becomes enmeshed in helping everyone as she seeks to rediscover her art. The book is well written, though some of the characterizations are a bit clichéd--the nuns are beatific, for instance, while Lawrence, though cantankerous, finds joy in helping the community rather than in his wealth. An uplifting story that offers clear signposts about how it will unfold, bringing comfort and closure to the reader. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.