education pathways

Home » Book Review » The Path to the Last House Before the Sea–sad secrets

The Path to the Last House Before the Sea–sad secrets

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Goodreads

The Path to the Last House Before the Sea

by Liz Eeles

Alyssa has come to Heaven’s Cove to start life over, changing her name and her profession while harboring a big secret. She lives in a small wooden caravan on Magda’s property. Magda owns an ice cream parlor and returned a number of years ago to be close to her best friend Penny and husband Stan. Magda has her own secret that is eating away at her despite the happy face she presents to the world. Jack is taking a hiatus from his work to help out his dad Stan in the town’s only grocery store, a tiny place that the community depends upon. Their lives become intertwined as an unlikely romance develops between visionary Alyssa and nerdy Jack. 

A major thread is Alyssa’s search for clues and information about a 300 year old tale of a missing couple and a smuggling ring. Her search for the truth puts Alyssa and Jack’s lives in danger. Meanwhile Jack is dealing with his soon-to-be ex-wife, her boyfriend, and his beloved adopted son. 

Author Liz Eeles weaves all of these threads into a background of a wedding in Heaven’s Cove that the whole community is involved in. The setting is beautiful and the town’s residents are both kind and gossipy at the same time. If you like an interesting plot and characters in a clean novel, The Path to the Last House Before the Sea would be a great choice.

I received a complimentary copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.

Rating: 5/5

Category: Fiction, Women’s Fiction

Notes: #5 in the Heaven’s Cove Series, but can be read as a standalone. There are characters from previous books who make cameo appearances, but each book in the series has new characters who are the focus of the current book.

Publication:  May 18, 2023—Bookouture

Memorable Lines:

A hot wash of shame flooded through him. When had he become so…? He turned into the lane that led past the village green, unable to settle on the right word for his behaviour. Arrogant, maybe? Ignorant? Boorish?

“Three point one four one five nine…” he began to mutter under his breath. Reciting the mathematical constant pi from memory, as far as he could go, always calmed him down. The number was beautiful. It was fixed and unchanging—unlike his life right now.

Alyssa crossed her fingers, just in case, and watched seagulls—tiny white dots—swooping over cottage roofs, and a child’s lost red balloon floating into the sky. The village looked like a spider’s web from up here, with paths going in all directions and the church in the centre.


7 Comments

  1. I love stories of little towns on the water that everyone is in everyone else’s business. I can’t imagine searching for clues about a 300 year old tale. You definitely have me intrigued!

    Liked by 1 person

    • lghiggins's avatar lghiggins says:

      The original motivation was for the protagonist to expand her tourist tours of the area to include something about smuggling. By the end of the story, it had become quite personal to her.

      Like

  2. I really love Liz Eeles’s books, but I haven’t made it around to this one quite yet. Sounds like I need to remedy that.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. This is a book I normally wouldn’t pay attention to, but after reading your review, I changed my mind! I love the colors on the cover too, so pretty!
    Jenna

    Liked by 1 person

    • lghiggins's avatar lghiggins says:

      I can count on you to appreciate that cover, and I agree. There is so much going on in this book, and you can’t help but root for the characters–even before you know their secrets.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Carla's avatar Carla says:

    I really love this series, Linda. The setting is wonderful and each story is so heartwarming. Great review. I hope there will be more.

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a comment

Archives