Out Now
Published by: Lake Union Publishing
Purchase from Amazon here
The Blurb:
With her fortieth birthday approaching, Lucy Carpenter thinks
she finally has it all: a wonderful new husband, Jonah, a successful career and
the chance of a precious baby of her own. Life couldn’t be more perfect.
But becoming parents proves much harder to achieve than Lucy and
Jonah imagined, and when Jonah’s teenage daughter Camille comes to stay with
them, she becomes a constant reminder of what Lucy doesn’t have. Jonah’s love
and support are unquestioning, but Lucy’s struggles with work and her own
failing dreams begin to take their toll. With Camille’s presence straining the
bonds of Lucy’s marriage even further, Lucy suddenly feels herself close to
losing everything…
This heart-wrenchingly poignant family drama from bestselling
author Amanda Prowse asks the question: in today’s hectic world, what does it
mean to be a mother?
My Review:
I have
heard so many wonderful things about Amanda’s work, but The Idea of You is the
first book I have read by her, and I promise you this – it will not be my last!
Wow!! What a heart wrenching, emotional, beautiful book this is.
Exploring
the struggle to conceive and have a child is something that affects so many
people each and every day, and one that whilst we empathise, we have little
understanding of how it must feel unless we have been through it. Miscarriage
or the inability to conceive is often given the ‘aww’ sympathy reaction but not
thought of as a catastrophic loss, which it can be.
The Idea of
You explores the impact that this can have both on Lucy personally, but also on
the relationship between her and Jonah. That overwhelming urge to be able to
carry a baby and become a parent, the secrecy and feeling of failure that you
keep from others.
It is
further complicated that Jonah already has a teenage daughter Camille who doesn’t
make things easy for Lucy, despite her best efforts to make Camille feel
welcome. Can they overcome this, especially as Lucy’s urge for motherhood
becomes stronger and Camille’s rebellion becomes harder?
This is such
a moving book and written with such depth and well developed characters it felt
very precious and as I was reading it I could feel my mannerism becoming soft
and protective, and I wanted to nurture and honour it. I think this is because
Amanda has produced a book so full of reality and realism that it felt like I
could be reading someone’s true story and it deserved respect and understanding.
Thank you
Amanda for writing a book which will only increase understanding and empathy
for the people who have been in this situation, and for writing a book with
characters that as a reader I came to care about. They will stay with me in
time to come.
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