Thursday, July 1, 2010

The Beach House

Nothing can be more relaxing and therapeutic than a few days by the water, sun, and sand.

In The Beach House, by Jane Green, Nan, the sixty-five year old, rambunctious woman who everyone in Nantucket knows of, opens her home to guests wanting a few days of blissful vacation by the beach.

First, there’s Daniel, needing space away from his wife for the summer, who decides to come to Nan’s beach house. He and his wife have spent months with a therapist, struggling with a marriage that doesn’t seem to be going anywhere. Daniel is quiet and finds it difficult to open up to his wife, especially about his one secret that would tear their family apart forever.

Next comes Daff, a real-estate agent needing some serious alone time with her thoughts and herself after her overwhelming divorce. Her young, teenage daughter struggles so much with the divorce, that Daff actually considers letting her spend some time with her father and his new girlfriend. Although guilty at first, Daff finally is free to just be herself and not have to worry about walking on eggshells in the presence of a teenager.

Finally, Nan is ecstatic to have her son, Michael, come home for the summer. Michael has been so busy as a top jeweler in New York that he barely has time to visit his mother in Nantucket, his home and favorite place in the world. After ending yet another disastrous relationship, he escapes to Nantucket to help his mom with her lovely home on top of the bluff.

Nan is so happy to have her home bustling with people again, that she doesn’t even focus on the money that’s slowly fading away in her bank account and the huge mansions that are being built all around her beach house, taking the place of previous small, beach homes that have always made up Nantucket.

As the group slowly receives their much needed relaxation, some visitors arrive in Nantucket that change the leisure time to anxiety time.

The Beach House is a wonderful beach read that tells the tale of numerous characters who all form a solid connection in the end. This novel looks at many different perspectives that all tie into one destination- finding one’s true self.

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