Late Fall by Noelle Adams: This is an wonderful woman’s fiction book about self examination. What happens when we get older, when we look back at our lives, what do we see, how did we live, what regrets do we have. What I really enjoyed about this book is that it is told by a 72 year old woman that has never been married, has had personal success in her life. Has loved and is loved by her family.
When she moves into an assisted living home, it kind of feels like you are back in school again. There are the nice “kids” and the not so nice “kids”. There is the boy that she never got along with that she is now forced to get along with because he is living right down the hall. But as the story moves along, you see how relationships and friendships form among the characters. Common grounds are found and new loves are made.
Late Fall by Noelle Adams is an interesting book as it is about an older woman, told from her perspective and to me, was a refreshing change from other books. I really enjoyed this story.
Book Info:
Publication: Published March 7th 2016 | Brain Mill Press |
This is life. After summer, the green leaves always change colors and fall off the trees. Dogs die, no matter how much you love them. Land is sold, even if you used to tell yourself you were going to die on the property. And people get old.
Even me.
Ellie Davenport has watched the same valley change with the seasons since she was a child. A sharp and intelligent woman, she’s enjoyed a stellar professional career, a full love life featuring interesting men, and a small but loving circle of family and friends.
Now she’s on the other side of the valley, retired, alone, and the view is much different. She wants to believe that it’s just as beautiful from this side, looking back at her life, but the self-sufficient resiliency she’s always depended on to keep her path straight and people at arm’s length isn’t as reliable in the crowded and socially uncomfortable microcosm of assisted living.
The discovery that her old work rival, Dave Andrews, is just down the hall, just as annoyingly handsome, and keeps showing up on her daily hike is most definitely a disaster and not at all interesting.
I would have thought that, living as long as he has, some of that arrogance would have been burned off through the fires of life, but evidently it hasn’t been. He’s still the same jackass who showed up in my office one day and told me my budget for periodicals would be cut in half starting immediately.
Dave isn’t just the same as he always was. Loss has a way of moving into the the heart and changing people. Except — sometimes a long walk with a smart woman can show you just how much room you still have left for love.
I don’t know if you’ve ever tried it, but telling yourself there’s nothing to hope for doesn’t ever work.
We’re human beings, after all. Hope is what we do.
Tammy Y
Thanks for your review