Snowflakes over Holly Cove
by Lucy Coleman
Tia is facing her first Christmas without her mother. She also has a painful distancing from her brother Will and his family. She is returning to her job as a journalist after a breakdown, but as we see her take on a feature assignment in isolated Holly Cove, she is depicted as a strong and resilient woman.
As Lucy Coleman’s Snowflakes over Holly Cove unfolds, Tia finds herself in the middle of other familial dysfunctional relationships that include Clarissa, her successful but manipulative boss, and Nic, the owner of the house she is renting. She also meets Max, a reticent retired Navy officer who is her temporary neighbor. Everyone has secrets, and some of those secrets might tie the characters together.
There are many interesting, vying, plot threads as Tia interviews couples for her feature articles and tries to sort through what makes a relationship sustainable. The story ends with some surprising action scenes and lots of genuine moments of compassion and reconciliation. This is a novel that rises above the typical Christmas feel-good story; readers will appreciate its depth.
I would like to extend my thanks to netgalley.com and to Aria for giving me the opportunity to read this book in exchange for an honest review.
Rating: 5/5
Category: Romance, Women’s Fiction
Publication: September 18, 2018—Aria
Memorable Lines:
Strangely, I find myself repeatedly drawn to the window to marvel at the hostility of the sea. It’s a top to bottom, wall-to-wall steely greyness, that is like a blanket and it’s hard to see where the water ends and the sky begins.
“Money and possessions, I came to appreciate, create mistrust and envy. They bring out the worst in people.”
I truly believe that the spirit of Christmas is embodied in this room, today. It’s not about the gifts, or the amount of money you have to lavish on the occasion. It’s about the desire to make it special for other people and in doing so, it makes it special for you, too.
Congregations on your new badge. Sounds like a good story
s
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Thanks, Betty.
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Money and possessions, I came to appreciate, create mistrust and envy. They bring out the worst in people.”
Great memorable lines!
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I think we have all seen that happen.
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Too true.
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Sounds like another good one!
Jenna
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Thanks, Jenna.
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Ooooh I loved this book. I too feel Lucy is a fantastic author
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She’s good and she created an atypical, unpredictable Christmas romance.
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I love that you are still reading these Christmas and winter stories. I read them year round as well. This one sounds like one that will leave you thinking. Great review Linda.
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I wish I could say I planned it that way, but I am really just meeting my ARC commitments. I don’t regret it, however, as I am enjoying slipping them in between mysteries. Also, I love Christmas so it is a fun way to extend the season.
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When I get home, I still have a dozen or so Hallmark Christmas movies that I recorded but haven’t watched so I will be reliving Christmas in March and April while I am in isolation for 14 days.
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A positive part of your isolation.
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