Eight at the Lake: A Book Review
. . . with a little help from the cats:
GROVER: Wake up, Rufus! You have to help Mommy review a book! |
RUFUS: Can't I sleep a little longer, Grover? GROVER: No! Here's the book. Now get busy reading it! |
When my husband saw me reading Lin Stepp's latest novel, he thought the cover picture was Smith Mountain Lake, which is only a couple of miles from us. But it wasn't. Eight at the Lake, Stepp's latest Mountain Home novel, takes place in Dandridge, Tennessee—which is a real place.
As she does in her other Mountain Home or Smoky Mountain novels, Stepp provides a map—a feature I find useful. Since her novels have a strong sense of place, it's nice to see where important locations are.
In Eight at the Lake, the two main characters—Samantha King and Ford McDaniel—are both in their late 30s, both have challenging careers, and both have known loss. And they're both attracted to each other, though they resist the attraction. The book's back cover introduces them and the complications in their lives:
Like many of Stepp's novels, Eight at the Lake conveys a strong sense of family. Ford—with help from his parents and his housekeeper Juanita—raises his own four childen as well as Samantha's late sister's four children. Samantha, in town for the summer while she recuperates from serious injuries she received while covering Hurricane Andrew the previous October, wants to get to know her nieces and nephews better before she returns to her job in the fall.
RUFUS: From what Mommy wrote about it so far, it sounds interesting. |
If you're a fan of small town fiction that features a strong sense of family, connections to the land, and two interesting and complex main characters, you'll enjoy Eight at the Lake.
RUFUS: I didn't think I'd like a book with a veterinarian in it, but this veterinarian was really nice. It was a good book! |
I've reviewed several of Lin Stepp's Smoky Mountain novels on this blog, and Eight at the Lake has now become my favorite. I really like Samantha—a strong, complex, and take-charge woman who is her own person, who enjoys her job, and who doesn't let setbacks get her down. Eight at the Lake will release April 1, but it can be preordered from Amazon.
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Labels: book review, Lin Stepp
1 Comments:
Thanks for the introduction to a writer I hadn't known. And thank Rufus, Grover, and Otis for helping.
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