Crossing Oceans

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Overview

Jenny Lucas swore she’d never go home again. But being told you’re dying has a way of changing things. Years after she left, she and her five-year-old daughter, Isabella, must return to her sleepy North Carolina town to face the ghosts she left behind. They welcome her in the form of her oxygen tank–toting grandmother, her stoic and distant father, and David, Isabella’s dad . . . who doesn’t yet know he has a daughter. As Jenny navigates the rough and unknown waters of her new reality, the unforgettable story that unfolds is a testament to the power of love and its ability to change everything—to heal old hurts, bring new beginnings . . . even overcome the impossible. A stunning debut about love and loss from a talented new voice.

  • Crossing Oceans
    Crossing Oceans

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly
Jenny Lucas has returned to her childhood home, a refuge of picket fences and lace-covered tabletops. But with an intensity likely garnered from years of unpublished suspense writing, debut novelist and blogger Holmes slowly unveils the hidden angst in this homecoming. A single mother, Jenny must find caregivers who will raise her five-year-old daughter when she’s gone. She’s forced to mend relations with two possible custodians: the baby’s father, who doesn’t know he has a child, and her own cold-hearted father. As Jenny comes to face her future as well as her past, dramatic emotions yield to an appreciation of life and an enjoyment of the grace of fleeting moments. There can be no happy ending, but Holmes ties a neat bow of acceptance around this haunting tale that packs an emotional wallop. Keep tissues near. (May)

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9781414333052
  • Publisher: Tyndale House Publishers
  • Publication date: 4/26/2010
  • Pages: 400
  • Sales rank: 215,468
  • Product dimensions: 5.50 (w) x 8.20 (h) x 1.10 (d)

Meet the Author

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Read an Excerpt

crossing Oceans


By Gina Holmes

Tyndale House Publishers, Inc.

Copyright © 2010 Gina Holmes
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-1-4143-3305-2


Chapter One

Nothing deepens a stream like a good rain ... or makes it harder to cross.

Just a few hundred feet away from the home I'd sworn never to return to, I sat on the smooth surface of a boulder. With my jeans cuffed and toes wiggling in the cold water, I reflected on how recent rains had caused these banks to widen and swell.

Perhaps a decent relationship with my father might also rise as a result of the storm we'd endured. Much could happen in six years. Maybe my absence had, as the adage promised, made his heart grow fonder. Maybe my homecoming would be like that of the Prodigal and he'd greet me with eager arms. Together we'd cry for all that had passed between us-and all that should have but didn't.

Maybe. Maybe. Maybe.

It's going to go just fine, I told myself as I traced the slippery surface of a moss-covered branch with my foot.

"What's funny, Mommy?"

Isabella's voice startled me. I didn't dare admit that what my five-year-old interpreted as mirth was really a grimace, because then of course she'd want to know what was the matter. "Nothing, sweetness."

She threw a pebble at the water, but it dropped inches from its goal, clinking against slate instead. "You were smiling like this-" She bared her teeth in a forced grin.

Gently, I pinched her cheek.

"You're beautiful, Mommy."

"Thank you, baby. So are you."

"Yes, I am."

I smiled at that. I smiled at just about everything she said and did.

"Mommy, why'd we drive here 'stead of Cowpa's house?"

Cowpa was her name for grandparents of either gender. I probably should have corrected her long ago, but I found the odd term endearing. Besides, I reasoned, she'd grow out of baby talk all too soon without any help from me. I found myself wondering what other lessons she would learn in my absence.

The thought overwhelmed me, but I refused to cry in front of my daughter. Unloading my heavy burden onto her delicate shoulders was not an option. I might not be able to control much in my life lately, but I could still protect her. Nothing mattered more.

"This was my thinking place when I was a little girl. I wanted to show it to you in case you wanted to think sometimes." I breathed in the area's familiar fragrance-a combination of damp leaves, pine, and earth-and eyed my surroundings. Same trees. Same sounds. Nothing much ever changed in this spot. That, more than any other reason, was why I loved it so much. Especially now.

I'd spent half of my life here, sitting on this unyielding rock, trying to make sense of the world. The loss of my mother. My father's neglect. The sometimes-sweet, often-bitter, words of my ex-boyfriend, David. It was here I'd first gotten real with God, begging Him not to take my mother. Railing at Him when He did.

Isabella bounced on one foot. "What did you think about here?"

I poked my toes through water, watching droplets glide down my pink toenails. "Well, when I was little, I thought of catching frogs and grasshoppers and wondered whether I would ever have a best friend to share my secrets with."

"Did you find your best friend?" A dangling pine needle twirled from one of her curls.

Love overwhelmed me. "Yes, sweetness. I got you."

She gave me one of her endearing smiles, pulled the debris from her hair, examined it, then dropped it in the stream. I scooped a handful of the cool water and let it slip through my fingers like the life I'd just left behind-my studio apartment that never really felt like home, the corporate ladder I'd just begun to climb, my coworkers who never became the close friends I had longed for. All of it now gone, as though it had never existed at all.

My daughter looked at me askance. "I wanna go."

The hum of nature faded. The only thing I heard now was the sharp tick of my wristwatch reminding me just how short time was. Standing, I assured myself that I could do what I had come to do. For Isabella, I could do it. I slipped my damp feet into my Birkenstocks and brushed off my rear before collecting my daughter's chubby hand in my fingers.

I forced one leg in front of the other and made my way past my car, along the winding dirt road.

A familiar picket fence dressed in tangled braids of morning glories came into view. I clutched my daughter's fingers tighter, feeling more like child than mother.

Placing a hand over my heart, I stopped and took it in. I'd forgotten how beautiful my childhood home was and how much I'd missed it. As I remembered running barefoot through this yard and cannonball jumping into the pond out back, joy pricked at me ... until my gaze settled on the bare dirt beneath the stairs. How many times had I hidden under that porch, wounded by my father's words? Too many. My smile died.

Isabella looked up at me eagerly, giving the motivation, if not the courage, I needed to continue. Ghosts of summers past faded as the fragrant scent of roses washed over me, and with it another wave of doubt so tall and wide, I felt as though I might drown in it.

What if my father wouldn't receive me? Or worse, what if he didn't accept my daughter? I felt sure Mama Peg would embrace her, but could he? Accepting me had proven impossible for him, but perhaps a child as charming as Isabella could thaw his arctic heart.

Now on the second stair, I paused to look behind me at the road, feeling a sudden urge to retreat. Isabella bounced on the balls of her feet, anxious to continue.

When we reached the porch, I squatted to her level. "Are you ready to meet your grandpa and great-grandma?"

The longing in her maple syrup eyes needed no words, but she added them anyway. "Jane has a cowpa, Natalie has a cowpa, Carter has two cowpas, and ..." She gave me a look that said, Must I continue?

"Okay, I get it." I stood and lifted a fist to the door. Before I could knock, Isabella lurched forward and did it for me. She tapped her sandaled foot twice, then reached to knock again.

I grabbed her hand. "Give them a chance."

The oversize wildflower wreath swayed as the door creaked open. An elderly woman with thick gray hair fashioned into a bun stood before us, oxygen tubes protruding from her nostrils. Deep wrinkles fractured her leathery skin. Her eyebrows were bushes, her lips were shriveled like raisins, and a heavy, floral perfume emanated from her.

Isabella gasped, but I beamed. "Mama Peg."

My grandmother winked at me before turning her milky gaze to her great-granddaughter. "You must be Bella."

Isabella's mouth opened and a strange squeal escaped. I don't know who was more horrified at that moment-Isabella at the sight of Mama Peg, Mama Peg at Isabella's revulsion, or me at their initial reactions to each other.

Mama Peg broke out in a deep belly laugh, intermingled with emphysemic hacks. Isabella leaped back as though she expected my grandmother and her tank to explode.

I laughed so hard tears streamed down my cheeks. That seemed to calm Isabella, and soon she was grinning too.

"I'm a wretched sight now, little girl, but not so long ago, I used to be as pretty as you," my grandmother managed through her own amusement.

Isabella looked at me to dispel this ridiculous claim. I could only nod. I should have prepared her for this.

Mama Peg raised an unruly eyebrow at me. "I don't think she believes me."

Catching my breath, I wiped my eyes. "I'm not sure I do either." I added a wink to soften the jab. I knew she had been lovely, of course. I'd seen the proof in photographs. She still was in my eyes-one of the most beautiful women I had ever known, despite the cruel effects of tobacco and time.

An exaggerated scowl deepened her wrinkles. "Genevieve Paige Lucas, you're still a brat."

Leaning in, I hugged her with all I had. "I missed you, Grandma."

"You too, Jenny. You stayed away far too long." She hugged me tight, then slowly pulled away from me. Her eyes glistened, but her tears, every bit as stubborn as she, refused to fall. She scanned the porch. "Where are your bags?"

"In the car. I'll get them later."

She squinted past me at the empty brick driveway. "You parked in front of the stream, I gather?"

I nodded.

A glint of understanding crinkled her eyes as she stepped back, motioning us into the house. My grandmother, more than anyone, understood my need to commune with nature.

When I entered my father's home, my heart once again found my throat. I ushered Isabella across the threshold and hastily scanned the living room, searching for him. I watched Isabella take in the cozy surroundings. Braided rugs protected the hardwood floor. Vases of garden flowers rested on lace-covered tabletops. Everything was just as I remembered ... including the chill creeping through me, which had nothing to do with air-conditioning.

"It's beautiful, Cowpa!"

Mama Peg shut the door and turned to me. "What did that child call me?"

"That's her word for Grandma-" I cleared my throat-"and Grandpa."

My grandmother shook her head, eyeing my daughter. "Call me Mama Peg. Understand?"

Without responding, Isabella made her way toward the stone fireplace, enthralled with the portrait hanging above it. A woman with long chestnut curls flowing about her narrow waist sat sidesaddle on a white horse. My mother's painted gaze followed me. Her sad little smile made me long to comfort her.

Isabella moved as close to it as she could without stepping onto the hearth. "It's you, Mommy."

Mama Peg grabbed the black handle of her oxygen canister and rolled it to where my daughter stood. "That's your mama's mama. They look a lot alike, don't you think?"

Isabella nodded.

"She died before you were born."

A familiar ache settled within me as memories of my mother's last days forced their way into my mind, elbowing away more pleasant memories.

Isabella picked at the glitter on her T-shirt. "Where do you go when you die?"

I flashed my grandmother a warning look. "Never mind." I had no desire to explain death to her at that moment.

"Where's Dad?" I asked.

Mama Peg's shoulders sank. "Upstairs being him."

"What did he say when you told him I was coming?" I held my breath and fingered my thick braid.

"You know him. He ..." Without finishing the thought, she made her way to the kitchen and we followed. The hard rubber heels of her shoes scraped against the tile floor as she shuffled to the back door. She pulled the lace curtain to the side and looked out the window at the pond out back.

Isabella lifted the top from a white candle in the table's center, releasing a waft of vanilla.

I wrinkled my nose at the sickeningly sweet smell, took the lid from her, and replaced it. "You didn't tell him everything, did you?"

"I told him he had a granddaughter."

"That's all?"

Her voice began to break up. "Of course. A mother should never have to tell her son-"

"Bella?" I interrupted before Mama Peg could say more in front of my child than I was prepared to answer for.

Isabella's gaze ping-ponged between us.

"See if you can find Sweet Pea." The thought occurred to me that there I was, trying to avoid the subject of death, and the cat might be long gone. I lowered my voice, though Isabella stood no farther away than Mama Peg. "He is still-?"

"Alive?" With a chortle, she let the curtain drop back into place and turned to face me. "His Royal Stubbornness refuses to cash in his ninth life. You really must want to change the subject badly to send your sweet girl searching for that homicidal monster."

Isabella's expression filled with alarm.

"Not a monster." I tousled her soft curls. "Just a kitty."

Mama Peg hacked, her skin taking on a grayish hue. I rubbed her back, hating the plastic feel of her polyester top. When her cough subsided, she plucked a napkin from a pile on the table and wiped her mouth. "That furry devil will scratch her bloody."

"She'll never catch him."

"You forget, six years have passed. He's old and slow now."

Considering what the tabby might do to Isabella if she tried to pet him gave me pause. I took her hands in mine and squatted to eye level. "Look for him, Bella, but don't get too close. He's got a bad temper and sharp claws that will give you boo-boos."

She promised obedience, then raced off for the hunt.

Mama Peg turned to me. "She's braver than you were at her age."

"Who isn't?" I had never been the fearless child Isabella was. She saw everything as a ray of sunshine living just to warm her. No matter how many times I counseled her that not everyone had her best interests at heart, she refused to believe it. After all, she loved everything and everyone, so why wouldn't they love her back?

Mama Peg adjusted the tubing threaded over her ears. "When are you going to tell your father?"

I walked to the stove and picked up the teakettle. Finding it heavy, I set it back down and turned on the burner. A snap preceded a flame.

"I want to see how he treats her first."

"Of course he'll love her. She's part of you. Part of your mother."

An old, familiar dagger lunged into my chest and I hated that even now it could penetrate me. "He hasn't loved anything since Mom passed."

"That's not true," she whispered, as if saying it softly could somehow breathe truth into the falsehood. She pulled two ceramic mugs from the cupboard. "He's a good man, Jenny."

I felt a sudden heaviness about me as I pulled a chair away from the table to sit. "A good man with a hardened heart."

She dropped a square of tea into each mug. "Having someone you love taken from you has a way of changing a person."

I crossed my arms.

She averted her gaze. "Stupid thing to say to you, I guess."

"I guess."

"So what if you don't like the way he is with her? Then what will you do?"

It was the question that had kept me awake for the past two weeks. The most important question in my world.

"I'm not her only parent."

"I guess now would be the time to tell me who her father is." She raised my chin, forcing me to look at her. After several seconds of reading me, she withdrew her hand. "As if I don't already know."

My face burned and I opened my mouth to say his name, but it stuck in my throat-a dam holding back half a decade's worth of tears. "I never told him."

Mama Peg's face drained of what little color it held. I could almost feel her heart splinter. "Oh, Jenny."

I deserved her scorn. But she wrapped her sagging arms around my shoulders, smothering me in her generous bosom, flowery perfume, and acceptance. Relief overwhelmed me.

"I found him! I found him!" The pattering of feet accompanied my daughter's shriek.

Mama Peg released me, and we turned to the doorway in anticipation of Isabella's excited return. She appeared, dragging my father by the hand.

His short, wavy hair was more gray now than brown. He wore his polo shirt tucked neatly into creased pants and a leather belt fastened around his trim belly. I'd have better luck trying to read Chinese than gauge his emotions by his stoic expression.

My fingernails dug into my palms and I felt the need to sit before registering that I was already seated. When his gaze met mine, he gave me a quick once-over. I studied the lines around his eyes. Was he fighting a smile? If so, was it due to smugness that I'd come crawling home or joy at seeing me after so long? Or was I imagining it all?

Without a word, he walked to the kitchen window, held his hand over his eyes, and panned the side yard.

Mama Peg threw me an annoyed glance. "What the dickens is he doing?"

He turned around, this time donning a sly grin. "I'm looking for the airborne swine."

The dumb look on his face told me he expected laughter, but I just sat there slack-jawed.

"As I recall, you said you'd come home when pigs fly."

Though I promised myself I would curb my usual retorts, my mouth opened before I could will it not to. "Yeah, I get it. I'm smarter than I look."

He surprised me by waving his hand in dismissal. "So after six years of nothing, you've finally decided to let me meet my granddaughter. How very humane of you. I assume you're here because you're broke?"

My thoughts flashed back to the phone call home I'd made after leaving. I'd tearfully told my father I was pregnant. Five minutes into a lecture on the sins and consequences of fornication, I hung up without a word and never called again.

Every day for two weeks after that, his number showed on my caller ID. Not want wanting further berating, I never answered or called him back. After several months of silence, the number flashed again. This time I picked up, but it was my grandmother on the other line, not my father. Never again my father.

(Continues...)



Excerpted from crossing Oceans by Gina Holmes Copyright © 2010 by Gina Holmes. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
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Average Rating 4.5
( 86 )

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  • Posted April 12, 2010

    more from this reviewer

    A well written poignant weeper

    Following the death of her mother, a pregnancy in which her lover David Preston dumped her without knowing she was carrying and a fight with her father, Jenny Lucas left Tulleytown, North Carolina vowing to never return. Six years later, she and her daughter Isabella have come home. Her oxygen carrying Mama Peg welcomes her granddaughter and great-granddaughter while her daddy remains hurt and distant until Jenny explains she is dying from cancer just like her mom though a different form of the killer.

    Jenny seeks a caretaker for her child as she knows Mama Peg is not healthy enough and her dad failed her. She considers David, but when she goes to tell him he is a father, he is nasty. Ironically his wife Lindsay is nice. Her high school peer Craig Allen who rents a loft is kind to mother and daughter. However, the clock is running out on Jenny and she must decide what is best for her beloved daughter between her father and her former lover; both who failed her when she grieved her mom's death at a time when she needed each of them; she fears they will do again but this time she cannot clean up the mess.

    The key to this well written poignant weeper is no miracle occurs saving Jenny, but the right person is there for Isabella if the dying mom can get through the pain of her past to see the future as her dad believes David's dad's misdiagnosed his wife's illness leading to her death. Character driven with a powerful ensemble cast supporting Jenny, readers will appreciate the angst filling an ocean as Jenny worries who will raise Isabella once she dies.

    Harriet Klausner

    2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted December 9, 2010

    I Also Recommend:

    Once in a lifetime quality!

    When I turned the last page and sat back in my chair, the only word I could think of to describe this book is.wow. Heartrenching, gripping, can't-put-it-down kind of story that as a reader makes my heart glad to have the chance to read this book. It has a once in a life time quality to it that will make this story a best seller. It already is. It has that great of an impact.
    With a reminiscence of Nicholas Spark's A Walk to Remember, CROSSING OCEANS is the story of a young mother dying of cancer and the journey she must take to prepare her five year old daughter. You might already be throwing the idea of this book out, right? Too depressing. This is the farthest thing from the truth. Jenny has a sense of humor and a way of looking at the world that brings the reader into the middle of the story with her. By the first couple of chapters my heart was already wrenching for her as she slowly gave up her worldly existence. But there is hope in this story, a hope that cannot be found in secular fiction because of the hope in Christ. This book goes beyond mere life and death, this book taps into the reader's emotions. I felt anger, sadness, joy, the full gauntlet in this well written and poignant novel. This is one book that will stick with me for years to come.
    If there is one book you read this year, this needs to be it. It will change the way you look at all other books and the life you live, making each moment count.for Christ.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted August 22, 2010

    Crossing Oceans

    Crossing Oceans - Review by Martha A. Cheves, Author of Stir, Laugh, Repeat

    'Remember that night in the car, David? I started to tell you, but you broke up with me first. You said things could never work for us. You told me our fathers would never get along. You told me you didn't share my desire for having a family. How could I tell you you were going to be a father right after you said you never wanted children? When she was born, I called you from the hospital as I held her in my arms. I couldn't wait to show you what we'd created, but your answering machine picked up and I heard "David and Lindsey Preston aren't here to take your call." I didn't know you'd gotten married. It had been less than a years since we broke up. You wouldn't believe the shock I felt, the betrayal, the pain. I didn't want to cause trouble for you. I couldn't..'

    Jenny Lucas is the Prodigal Daughter returning home after walking away six years ago. David Preston had thrown her away when she needed him the most. When she was pregnant with their daughter Isabella. Now she's bringing her daughter home to meet the family she's never met, including her father. But Jenny isn't renewing the relationship with her own father as well as David for old times' sake. She's doing it out of necessity. She must find a home for Bella because she is dying with cancer.

    The Lucas', as well as the Preston family, have a lot of baggage to overcome. Jenny's dad insists that David's father killed her mother by misdiagnosing her illness. And her death is something that he's never been able to get over making it difficult for him to get close to Jenny. So, hating the Preston family as much as he does, he insists that Bella should be raised by him. David, as well as his family, have to overcome the fact that Jenny has done something that he and his wife Lindsey haven't been able to. She has given him a child, which has made him determined to have full custody of Isabella no matter what it takes. Bella, on the other hand, has to learn to give to others something she has only had to share with her mother. love. And while wading through these obstacles, everyone has to accept Jenny's dying. Can they all put aside their differences and help Jenny and Bella make their transitions as comfortably and positive as possible?

    I've never read a book quite as touching as Crossing Oceans. The characters are all written very strongly. Their courage, and sometimes lack of courage, is something that I think will stay with me for a long time in hopes that if I'm ever put into either of their positions, I can remember their strength exposed in Crossing Oceans It is one beautiful book.

    Tyndal House Publishers
    2010
    390 Pages
    ISBN# 978-1-4143-3305-2


    Review Stir, Laugh, Repeat at Amazon.com Stir, Laugh, Repeat

    Labels: Book Reviews, Cancer, cookbooks, Crossing Oceans, Family, garlic, Gina Holmes, Martha A Cheves, Spiced Egg Salad and Spinach, Stir Laugh Repeat

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted June 24, 2010

    more from this reviewer

    A Book With Take-Home Value

    This book came highly recommended to me and I was not disappointed. This book changed me.

    From the very first line I was intrigued. I wanted to know more about this woman. Why did she say she didn't have a decent relationship with her dad? I had to keep reading to find out.

    I appreciated Jenny's love for her small daughter, for her grandmother. I hurt for her when she remembered how she fell in love with Isabella's father, thinking he felt the same. I hurt for her when she revealed how he had broken off with her before she could tell him he would soon be a father.

    Gina Holmes has written a compelling book and her lead, Jenny Lucas is a strong woman. I admire her and wish to have the same strength of character.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted May 13, 2010

    Stunning debut novel will break readers' hearts

    Crossing Oceans by Gina Holmes is a stunning debut novel. Jenny Lucas has returned home after five years to do the hardest thing she's ever had to do. She left home after being dumped by her childhood sweetheart, David, just before she could tell him that she was pregnant. Her father's cold treatment after the death of her mother made her turn to David for comfort, but feeling abandoned by both of them, she left town to raise her daughter, Isabella, alone. Facing a death sentence from cancer, Jenny comes back home to find someone to care for Isabella when she's gone. I knew that this book would break my heart from the very first page. Holmes perfectly captures the agony and ecstasy of being a mother, and her portrayal of Jenny's trying to say good-bye to her child is poignant and heart-rending without being melodramatic. Just as in real life, when someone young and good is dying from a terrible illness, I found myself ranting at the unfairness of it all. The story goes even deeper when Holmes refuses to engage in cliches. David is a married jerk, and Jenny's father still can't seem to show his emotions, although his reaction to Jenny's diagnosis is one of the most moving in the entire novel. A twist midway through took my very breath away. Jenny's decisions show the true love of a mother, and her faith is inspiring. This is truly one of the most moving books I've read...ever! Even long after I've finished reading, I still find myself thinking about the message of love and devotion and focusing on my blessings. Gina Holmes is an author to watch!

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted May 12, 2010

    more from this reviewer

    A Beautiful True-to-life Story that will Shatter Your Heart!!

    Wow. Simply wow. What more can I say about a story that is as heart-wrenching as this one? It's beautiful. It's heart-breaking. It's real. It's life. Period.



    Gina Holmes brings a wonderful story full of heart ache and pain. It's also a story of forgiveness, family, and love. Not to mention a bit of humor from time to time. But above all it's about leaning on God's ways and trusting Him to know what's best for everyone. I literally read this book in less than a day. I couldn't put it done. More times than not I wanted to...not because the book wasn't good...but because if I didn't I wouldn't be able to see the words for the bluriness of tears! This story really hit home to me. It's full of Christian values but at the same time shows us how life really is. It's full of mistakes and broken promises but if we learn to lean on God, it's the best thing all around. While my heart went out to sweet, beautiful little Isabella, my heart went out most to Jenny. She suffered so much, from losing her mom to being dumped by her boyfriend to falling out with her father, then recieving shattering news. I found my self praying for her so many times! I became friends with Jenny...I cried when she did, laughed when she did, lost when she did. She's an amazing person in this story.



    I highly recommend this book to everyone. It's a 5 star worthy book, that will leave you in awe from the beautiful and heart-wrenching way that Gina Holmes brings truth to the story while making it fiction. The story line of this book is so close to real life that I felt every emotion that you can feel. POWERFUL! Again, I highly recommend this book! You will look at life with a whole new perspective and you will cherish every second of life! I am anxiously waiting with great anticipation for future books like this from Gina! Well done!

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted February 3, 2012

    Fantastic story!

    This story reminded me of the movie Beaches with Bette Midler. AN ALL TIME FAVORITE MOVIE! This book was a Fantastic read.

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  • Posted July 7, 2011

    Amazing BOOK!!

    This is an amazing book. I read it quickly. It makes you feel something while reading it.

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  • Posted May 13, 2011

    more from this reviewer

    Great book!

    This book captivated me from the beginning! Beautiful story! Have a box of tissues ready because this is definitely a tear jerker!!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted April 19, 2011

    Recommended

    This book was absolutely awesome. It held me captivated until the last page and then I wanted to read more. The ending was predictable to some extent but it was a great story about reconciliation within the family. I would definately recommend this book to others, it was truly a great read!

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  • Posted March 11, 2011

    Pedictable

    A friend highly recommended this book but I thought it was EXTEREMELY predictable and not that well written? Skip it...

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  • Posted December 19, 2010

    What a great book

    This is an author I had never read before. I really enjoyed the book. It is sad and it did make me cry and made me angry but well worth reading!!!

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  • Posted December 19, 2010

    need a good cry? try this weepy story

    well written weepy Christian romance/family love story. Good light reading

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  • Posted December 16, 2010

    Very realistic and wonderful!

    I really enjoyed how this writer made you feel like the main character was in fact a real person. Her thoughts and feelings were very realistic and normal. At times I would think she (main character) is awful for thinking that and then I would realize I too have had thoughts like that. I think at times we all have thoughts that are not nice and this book makes you feel normal. I believed every character in this book and could not put this book down. It is definitely an emotional roller coaster and worth every smile and tear.

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  • Posted December 13, 2010

    loved this book!!

    what a wonderful debut novel- i absolutely loved it! can't wait to read more from this author!

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  • Posted December 10, 2010

    SOOO GOOD!!

    I loved this book, quite a tear jerker but such a good story and so easy to relate to! Very much recommended!

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  • Posted November 30, 2010

    Very moving story. Give me more just like it.

    This is a very captivating book. But grab a box of tissues. It rips your heart out to see this mother face dying so young. The author captures the raw emotions so well I would guess that she has lost some one very close to her. I hope this author writes more books just like this.

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  • Posted November 26, 2010

    Loved it!

    This is not my typical read, but I really enjoyed this book. I'm not a mother, nor have I been through anything like the characters in this book. Somehow I still found "Jenny" very easy to relate to and it was easy to throw myself into this book. Word of advice though, keep tissues handy while reading! :)

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  • Posted August 19, 2010

    more from this reviewer

    Amazing new author!

    This was such an amazing book! I have not cried that much, nor that hard, while reading a book before. Its a very emotional story with very brave characters. This is a book you will not want to put down, except when you are crying so hard you cannot focus. Make sure you have tissues at all times. Definitely a story I would recommend to anyhow, its a must read.

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  • Posted July 4, 2010

    Amazing.

    I saw this book on a shelf at Borders, while trying to find something to read just to pass time. It struck me as interesting because the cover looked cute (which isn't a good way to pick a book). Once i sat on the sofa to read a couple of pages to see if i was interested, i was immediately hooked! The workers gave me a strange look because i was there for a while, but i just couldn't put down the book & knew i just had to buy it to take home and finish. It was soo worth the $15.21. I was crying for almost half the book & her characters were as close to reality as words can put on a page. Lessons well learned. I think this book changed me a bit inside too.

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