I
had a really hard time reading this one. Simon, only fifty-one years
young, dies suddenly one morning on the train to work. He leaves behind a
wife, Karen, and two young children (now you see why it was a tough
read), but they are not the only people touched by his loss. Karen’s
best friend, Anna, and Lou, a stranger who was also on the train that
morning, find that their lives will also be forever changed. Though
Karen, Anna, and Lou each have something different to learn from the
loss, they ultimately find themselves bound together in a friendship
forged during the most trying of times. While the subject matter tends
toward the trite, Rayner’s writing is concise and contemporary, bringing
her characters and their emotions to life in so realistic and
believable a way as to avoid the cliche. Her portrayal of emotion is
authentic, even to the point of being painful to read, but this story is
as much about relationships, hope, and second chances as it is about
death and loss, making the most valuable lesson of all that we each have
only one life to live. A difficult read, but a worthwhile one for sure.
This was book 45 on my way to 52.
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