Just Breathe [NOOK Book]

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Overview

Chicago cartoonist Sarah Moon tackles life’s real issues with a healthy dose of sharp wit in her syndicated comic strip Just Breathe. As Sarah’s cartoon alter ego, Shirl, undergoes artificial insemination, her situation begins to mirror Sarah’s own difficult attempts to conceive. However, Sarah’s dreams of the future did not include her husband’s infidelity: snag number two in Sarah’s so-called perfect life.

With Chicago – and her marriage – in the rearview mirror, she flees to the small Northern California coastal town where she grew up, a place she couldn’t wait to leave. Now she finds herself revisiting the past – an emotionally distant father and the...

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Overview

Chicago cartoonist Sarah Moon tackles life’s real issues with a healthy dose of sharp wit in her syndicated comic strip Just Breathe. As Sarah’s cartoon alter ego, Shirl, undergoes artificial insemination, her situation begins to mirror Sarah’s own difficult attempts to conceive. However, Sarah’s dreams of the future did not include her husband’s infidelity: snag number two in Sarah’s so-called perfect life.

With Chicago – and her marriage – in the rearview mirror, she flees to the small Northern California coastal town where she grew up, a place she couldn’t wait to leave. Now she finds herself revisiting the past – an emotionally distant father and the unanswered questions left by her mother’s death. As she comes to terms with her lost marriage, Sarah encounters a man she never expected to meet again: Will Bonner, the high school heartthrob she’d skewered mercilessly in her old comics. Now a local firefighter, he’s been through some changes himself. But just as her heart is about to reawaken, Sarah discovers she is pregnant. With her ex’s twins.

It’s hardly the most traditional of new beginnings, but who says life and love are predictable...or perfect? The winds of change have led Sarah here. Now all she can do is just close her eyes...and breathe.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

Bestselling author Wiggs (Snowfall at Willow Lake) keeps her romance reputation going with this feel-good story of a wronged woman who gets out on her own and gets going. Sarah Moon, a comic-strip writer, is happily married to Jack Daly-until she comes home to find him entwined and naked with a business associate he had badmouthed to her just hours earlier. After five years of marriage, including months of infertility treatments because of Jack's cancer, infidelity is the last straw, and Sarah pack ups and leaves Chicago for her hometown of Glenmuir, Calif. Sarah uses her comic strip, Just Breathe, to vent her frustration and relieve her stress. The character, Shirl, is undergoing fertility treatments, getting a divorce and moving back in with her mom. (Comic strips open each section of the novel). And in Glenmuir, lo and behold, Sarah's dreams come true. She finds out she's pregnant, and begins a friendship with her high school nemesis, Will Bonner, who's now the town fire captain and a single dad whose lonely daughter reminds Sarah of herself as a young girl. Wiggs takes serious situations and weaves them into an emotionally wrought story that will have readers reaching for the Kleenex one moment and snickering out loud the next. (Sept.)

Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Library Journal

Cartoonist Sarah Moon is shocked and devastated when she stops by her husband's work site after her latest fertility treatment and finds him with another woman. When Jack refuses to acknowledge that he has done anything wrong and says he wants a divorce, Sarah trades his prized custom restored Pontiac GTO for a MINI Cooper and heads for Glenmuir, the small northern California town where she grew up. Somewhat to Sarah's surprise, the area and people she couldn't wait to leave have changed-or perhaps she has. Family and friends, including her high school crush Will Bonner, rally round, and Sarah starts to relax. That is until she realizes she's pregnant. This is a lovely, moving novel with an engaging heroine. Best-selling author Wiggs's (Table for Five ) talent is reflected in her thoroughly believable characters as well as the way she recognizes the importance of family by blood or other ties. Readers who like Nora Roberts and Susan Elizabeth Phillips will enjoy Wiggs's latest. Highly recommended for all public libraries. [The finished book will include cartoons not reproduced in the advanced reading copy.-Ed.]-Elizabeth Mellett, P.L. of Brookline, MA

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9781426832093
  • Publisher: Harlequin Enterprises
  • Publication date: 5/1/2009
  • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
  • Format: eBook
  • Pages: 464
  • Sales rank: 19,495
  • File size: 682 KB

Meet the Author

Susan Wiggs' first book was published by Zebra in 1987, and since then she has been published by Avon, Tor, HarperCollins, Harlequin, Mira and Warner Books. Susan is a frequent workshop leader and speaker at writers' conferences, including the Romance Writers of America conference, the PNWA and Maui Writers Conference. She won a RITA award in 1994, and her recent novel The Charm School was voted one of RWA's Favorite Books of the Year.
She lives on an island in the Pacific Northwest with her husband, Jay, her daughter, Elizabeth, and an Airedale that hasn't been groomed since 1994.

Read an Excerpt


After a solid year of visits to the clinic, Sarah was starting to find the decor annoying. Maybe the experts here believed earth tones had a soothing effect on anxious, aspiring parents. Or perhaps that the cheery burble of a wall fountain might cause an infertile woman to spontaneously drop an egg like an overly productive laying hen. Or even that the soft shimmer of brass chimes could induce a wandering sperm to find its way home like a heat-seeking missile.

The post-procedure period, lying flat on her back with her hips elevated, was starting to feel like forever. It was no longer standard practice to wait after insemination but many women, Sarah included, were superstitious. They needed all the help they could get, even from gravity itself.

There was a quiet tap on the door, then she heard it swish open.

"How are we doing?" asked Frank, the nurse-practitioner. Frank had a shaved head, a soul patch and a single earring, and he wore surgical scrubs with little bunnies on them. Mr. Clean showing his nurturing side.

"Hoping it is a 'we' this time," she said, propping her hands behind her head.

His smile made Sarah want to cry. "Any cramps?"

"No more than usual." She lay quietly on the cushioned, sterile-draped exam table while he checked her temperature and recorded the time.

She turned her head to the side. From this perspective, she could see her belongings neatly lined up on the shelf in the adjacent dressing room: her cinnamon-colored handbag from Smythson of Bond Street, designer clothes, butter-soft boots set carefully against the wall. Her mobile phone, programmed to dial her husband with one touch, or even a voice command.

Looking at all this abundance, she saw the trappings of a woman who was cared for. Provided for. Perhaps—no, definitely—spoiled. Yet instead of feeling pampered and special, she simply felt… old. Like middle-aged, instead of still in her twenties, the youngest client at Fertility Solutions. Most women her age were still living with their boyfriends in garrets furnished with milk crates and unpainted planks. She shouldn't envy them, but sometimes she couldn't help herself.

For no good reason, Sarah felt defensive and vaguely guilty for going through the expensive therapies. "It's not me," she wanted to explain to perfect strangers. "There's not a thing wrong with my fertility."

When she and Jack decided to seek help getting pregnant, she went on Clomid just to give Mother Nature a hand. At first it seemed crazy to treat her perfectly healthy body as if there were something wrong with it, but by now she was used to the meds, the cramps, the trans-vaginal ultrasounds, the blood tests… and the crushing disappointment each time the results came up negative.

"Yo, snap out of it," Frank told her. "Going into a funk is bad karma. In my totally scientific opinion."

"I'm not in a funk." She sat up and offered him a smile. "I'm fine, really. It's just that this is the first time Jack couldn't make the appointment. So if this works, I'll have to explain to my child one day that his daddy wasn't present at his conception. What do I tell him, that Uncle Frank did the honors?"

"Yeah, that'd be good."

Sarah told herself Jack's absence wasn't his fault. It wasn't anyone's fault. By the time the ultrasound revealed a maturing ovarian follicle and she'd given herself the HCG injection, they had thirty-six hours for the intra-uterine insemination. Unfortunately, Jack had already scheduled a late-afternoon meeting at the work site. He couldn't get out of it. The client was coming from out of town, he said.

"So are you still trying the old-fashioned way?" Frank asked.

She flushed. Jack's erections were few and far between, and lately, he'd all but given up. "That's not going so hot."

"Bring him tomorrow," Frank said. "I've got you down for 8:00 a.m." There would be a second IUI while the window of fertility was still open. He handed her a reminder card and left her alone to put herself back together.

Her yearning for a child had turned into a hunger that was painfully physical, one that intensified as the fruitless months marched past. This was her twelfth visit. A year ago, she never thought she'd reach this milestone, let alone face it by herself. The whole business had become de-pressingly routine—the self-injections, the invasion of the speculum, the twinge and burn of the inseminating catheter. After all this time, Jack's absence should be no big deal, she reminded herself as she got dressed. Still, for Sarah it was easy to remember that at the center of all the science and technology was something very human and elemental—the desire for a baby. Lately, she had a hard time even looking at mothers with babies. The sight of them turned yearning to a physical ache.

Having Jack here to hold her hand and endure the New Age Muzak with her made the appointments easier. She appreciated his humor and support, but this morning, she'd told him not to feel guilty about missing the appointment.

"It's all right," she had said with an ironic smile at breakfast. "Women get pregnant without their husbands every day."

He barely glanced up from checking messages on his BlackBerry. "Nice, Sarah."

She had touched her foot to his under the table. "We're supposed to keep trying to get pregnant the conventional way."

He looked up and, for an instant, she saw a dark flash in his gaze. "Sure," he said, pushing back from the table and organizing his briefcase. "Why else would we have sex?"

This resentful attitude had started several months ago. Duty sex, for the sake of procreation, was no turn-on for either of them, and she couldn't wait for his libido to return.

There had been a time when he'd looked at her in a way that made her feel like a goddess, but that was before he'd gotten sick. It was hard to be interested in sex, Jack often said these days, after getting your gonads irradiated. Not to mention the surgical removal of one of the guys. Jack and Sarah had made a pact. If he survived, they would go back to the dream they'd had before the cancer—trying to have a baby. Lots of babies. They had joked about his single testicle, they'd given it a name—the Uni-ball—and lavished it with attention. Once his chemo was finished, the doctors said he had a good chance of regaining fertility. Unfortunately, fertility had not been restored. Or sexual function, for that matter. Not on a predictable level, anyway.

They had decided, then, to pursue artificial insemination using the sperm he'd preserved as a precaution before starting aggressive treatment. Thus began the cycle of Clomid, obsessive monitoring, frequent visits to North Shore Fertility Solutions and bills so enormous that Sarah had stopped opening them.

Fortunately, Jack's medical bills were covered, because cancer wasn't supposed to happen to newlyweds trying to start a family.

The nightmare had come to light at 11:27 on a Tuesday morning. Sarah clearly remembered staring at the time on the screen of her computer, trying to remember to breathe. The expression on Jack's face had her in tears even before he said the words that would change the course of their lives: "It's cancer."

After the tears, she had vowed to get her husband through this illness. For his sake, she had perfected The Smile, the one she summoned when chemo landed him in a puking, quivering heap on the floor. The you-can-do-it-champ, I'm-behind-you-all-the-way smile.

This morning, feeling contrite after their exchange, she had tried to be sociable as she flipped through the brochure for Shamrock Downs, his current project, a luxury development in the suburbs. The brochure touted, "Equestrian center designed by Mimi Lightfoot, EVD."

"Mimi Lightfoot?" Sarah had asked, studying the soft-focus photographs of pastures and ponds.

"Big name to horse people," he assured her. "What Robert Trent Jones is to designing golf courses, she is to arenas."

Sarah wondered how challenging it was to design an oval-shaped arena. "What's she like?"

Jack had shrugged. "You know, the horsy type. Dry skin and no makeup, hair in a ponytail." He made a whinnying sound.

"You're so bad." She walked him to the door to say goodbye. "But you smell delicious." She inhaled the fragrance by Karl Lagerfeld, which she'd given him last June. She'd secretly bought it, along with a box of chocolate cigars, for Fathers Day, thinking there might be something to celebrate. When it turned out there wasn't, she had given him the Lagerfeld anyway, just to be nice. She'd eaten the chocolate herself.

She noticed, too, that he was wearing perfectly creased trousers, one of his fitted shirts from the Custom Shop, and an Hermès tie. "Important clients?" she asked.

"What?" He frowned. "Yeah. We're meeting about the marketing plans for the development."

"Well," she said. "Have a good day, then. And wish me luck."

"What?" he said again, shrugging into his Burberry coat.

She shook her head, kissed his cheek. "I've got a hot date with your army of seventeen million motile sperm," she said.

"Ah, shit. I really can't change this meeting."

"I'll be all right." Kissing him goodbye one more time, she suppressed a twinge of resentment at his testy, distracted air.

After the procedure, she followed the exit signs to the elevator and descended to the parking garage. Freakishly, the clinic had valet parking, but Sarah couldn't bring herself to use it. She was already indulged enough. She put on her cashmere-lined gloves, flexing her fingers into the smooth deerskin, then eased onto the heated leather seat of her silver Lexus SUV, which came with a built-in car seat. All right, so Jack had jumped the gun a little, buying this thing. But maybe, just maybe, nine months from now, it would be perfect. The ideal car for a soccer-mom-to-be.

She adjusted the rearview mirror for a peek at the backseat. At present, it was a jumble of drafting paper, a bag from Dick Blick Art Materials and, of all things, a fax machine, which was practically a dinosaur in this day and age. Jack thought she should let it die a natural death. She preferred to take it to a repair shop. It had been the first piece of equipment she'd bought with her earnings as an artist, and she wanted to keep it, even though no one ever faxed her anymore. She did have a career, after all. Not a very successful one, not yet, anyway. Now that Jack was cancer-free, she intended to focus on the comic strip, expanding her syndication. People thought it was simple, drawing a comic strip six days a week. Some believed she could draw a whole month's worth in one day, and then slack off the rest of the time. They had no idea how difficult and consuming self-syndication was, particularly at the beginning of a career.

When her car emerged from the parking lot, the very worst of Chicago's weather flayed the windshield. The city had its own peculiar brand of slush that seemed to fling itself off Lake Michigan, sullying vehicles, slapping at pedestrians and sending them scurrying for cover. Sarah would never get used to this weather, no matter how long she lived here. When she had first arrived in the city, a wide-eyed freshman from a tiny beach village in Northern California, she thought she'd encountered the storm of the century. She had no idea that this was normal for Chicago.

"Illinois," her mother had said when Sarah had received an offer of admission the spring of her senior year of high school. "Why?"

"The University of Chicago is there," Sarah explained.

"We have the best schools in the country right here in our backyard," her mother had said. "Cal, Stanford, Pomona, Cal Poly…"

Sarah had stood firm. She wanted to go to the University of Chicago. She didn't care about the distance or the god-awful weather or the flat landscape. Nicole Hollander, her favorite cartoon artist, had gone there. It was the place Sarah felt she belonged, at least for four years.

She'd never imagined living the rest of her life here, though. She kept waiting for it to grow on her. The city was tough and blustery, unpretentious and dangerous in some places, expansive and generous in others. Great food everywhere you turned. It had been overwhelming. Even the innate friendliness of Chicagoans had been confusing. How could you tell which ones were truly your friends?

She had always planned to leave the moment she graduated. She hadn't pictured raising a family here. But that was life for you. Filled with surprises.

Jack Daly had been a surprise as well—his dazzling smile and irresistible charm, the swiftness with which Sarah had fallen for him. He was a Chicago native, a general contractor in the family business. His entire world was right here—his family, friends and work. There was no question of where Sarah and Jack would live after they married.

The city itself was part of Jack's blood and bone. While most people believed life was a movable feast, Jack could not conceive of living anywhere but the Windy City. Long ago, in the dead of a brutal winter, when she hadn't seen the sun or felt a temperature above freezing for weeks, she had suggested moving somewhere a bit more temperate. He'd thought she was kidding, and they had never spoken of it again.

"I'll build you your dream house," Jack had promised her when they got engaged. "You'll learn to love the city, you'll see."

She loved him. The jury was still out on Chicago.

His cancer—that had been a surprise, too. They had made it through, she reminded herself every single day. But the disease had changed them both.

Chicago itself was a city of change. It had burned to the ground back in 1871. Families had been separated by the wind-driven firestorm that left nothing but charred timber and ash in its wake. People torn from their loved ones posted desperate letters and notices everywhere, determined to find their way back to each other.

Sarah pictured herself and Jack stepping gingerly through the smoldering ruins as they tried to make their way back to each other. They were refugees of another kind of disaster. Survivors of cancer.

Her front tire sank into a pothole. The jolt sent an eruption of mud-colored slush across the windshield, and she heard an ominous thud from the backseat. A glance in the mirror revealed that the fax machine had done a swan dive to the floor. "Lovely," she muttered. "Just swell." She pressed the wiper fluid wand, but the ducts sputtered out only an impotent trickle. The warning light blinked Empty.

Traffic crawled in a miserable stream northward. Stuck at a stoplight for the third cycle, Sarah thumped the steering wheel with the heel of her hand. "I don't have to sit in traffic," she said. "I'm self-employed. I might even be pregnant."

She wondered what Shirl would do in this situation. Shirl was her alter ego in Sarah's comic strip, Just Breathe. A sharper, more confident, thinner version of her creator, Shirl was audacious; she had a screw-you attitude and an impulsive nature.

Customer Reviews

Average Rating 4.5
( 78 )

Rating Distribution

5 Star

(45)

4 Star

(19)

3 Star

(7)

2 Star

(3)

1 Star

(4)

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See All Sort by: Showing 1 – 20 of 79 Customer Reviews
  • Anonymous

    Posted September 22, 2008

    A heartwarming tale of love and coming home

    Just Breathe is a story of love lost and love found of coming of age of feeling out of place and finding that place it's the love story of comic strip writer Sarah Moon and Fire chief Will Bonner who knew each other as kids where Sarah was the misfit and Will was the all American boy. It's about being able to come home again and it finally feeling like home. It's about families and friends. We first meet Sarah in Ms. Wiggs last book The Inn at Willow Lake where she makes an appearance with her then husband Jack when the story picks up Sarah is heading home to California after the breakup of her marriage only to still feel like the misfit who left when she graduated high school, she unexpectedly meets Will again when he's summoned to take her to the ER after a fainting spell. I won't tell you any more just that you have to read it.

    3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted September 12, 2008

    Beautiful story

    Susan Wiggs is one of my favorite authors. The story in 'Just Breathe' was very believable and heart-warming. Sarah and Will are wonderful characters and each brings their own life's twists for the reader to enjoy. Even thought Sarah's first husband is not what she thought he was and it seems true that women will put up with more in a marriage than men, Susan Wiggs does her usual job of making us look at people and their feelings.

    2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted June 26, 2010

    Falling in love doesn't always lead to a happy ending, but the second time sure does

    This boook surprisingly took my interest since I'm a picky reader and now Just Breathe is one of my favorites. I highly recommend it for any woman who enjoys reading a romantic story, because this book will definitely make you say, "Awh" and make you wish you belonged in this world where even though things don't work out at first, everything ends up perfect in your life.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted July 27, 2008

    terrific second chance at love tale

    In Chicago, Sarah Moon loves her husband of five years Jack Daly. She enjoys her work writing the comic strip Just Breathe whose star Shirl reflects much of the idiosyncrasies Sarah sees in life but unlike Sarah Shirl often confronts the hypocrisy. Sarah has been undergoing infertility treatment until she came home and saw Jack, who had been struggling to get it up with her, naked and up with his ¿horsy¿ business associate. --- She leaves heading home to Glenmuir, California while having Shirl represent her frustrations with men, divorce and being in your thirties while living under your mom¿s roof. Ironically, Sarah is pregnant and even more sardonic, she and fire chief Will Bonner, a single father, are friends. He was her enemy in high school while his daughter Aurora is her teen replica of loneliness and angst from when she was in high school and, who already has mom issues exponentially compounded by her father and the cartoonist falling in love. --- Susan Wiggs shows her greatness with this terrific second chance at love tale as she combines humor with the Shirl comic strip at the start of each chapter with deep angst laden relationship issues. The story line is obviously character driven by the lead couple and Aurora but what makes this so good is the reader will cry and laugh with the lead trip throughout. Ms. Wiggs provides a superb family drama filled with love. --- Harriet Klausner

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted September 8, 2008

    Today's romance

    If you like to read romance, this is one for today. A real human interest study. Sarah and Will are so human. This is the first book to make me cry in a long time. Wonderful book.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted December 15, 2011

    Favorite book ever!

    Loved it. One of my favorites of all time!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted August 6, 2011

    Just Breathe

    Enjoyed it!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted May 16, 2011

    I Also Recommend:

    GREAT book!

    This was the first book I have read of Susan Wiggs and I could not put it down. The characters in this book was so belivable and you wanted to know what happenes to them. I would love it if there was a second book picking up this store! The only bad thing with this book was it ended. This is a great book to curl up and read anytime.

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  • Posted December 27, 2010

    awsome

    awsome book made you feel for her

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  • Posted May 17, 2010

    more from this reviewer

    I Also Recommend:

    A good story with a woman on top

    I loved this story, it took a bit for me to get into, but overall okay. It reminds me of a coming over age romantic fairy tale. Instead of man meets girl, they get married, and then have babies, its quite the opposite. Woman leaves husband, founds out she is preggers, meets man, falls in love again. Who wouldn't love that. Not to lie, the whole romance during being pregnant did seem far fetched to me, but it can and does happen in real life. This book is great for a beach read, or just to spend somet time for yourself with. Highly suggested to any woman out there.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted July 27, 2009

    Couldn't put the book down.

    I really like this book. The story had several changes and they made for a good read. I am going to read more of the books by this auther and will share my book.

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  • Posted July 25, 2009

    I bought this for the title but stayed for the story

    This latest from popular writer Wiggs tells the story of Sarah Moon, a married cartoonist desperate to conceive a child after her husband's near-miss with cancer. When she finds him in flagrante dilecto with another woman, Sarah flees to her home town on the California coast, where she confronts demons from her past and discovers she's pregnant at last - with twins. As her romance with fire fighter Will Bonner develops, Sarah struggles to confront her lack of self confidence and gain the trust of Will's troubled stepdaughter Aurora. There's even a dog to round out the tale. Wiggs' style is better than most romance writers I've read, although she spends a lot of time telling the reader what the characters are feeling, instead of showing it. The descriptions are a little flat, as are the emotional scenes, but it's entertaining reading by any definition.

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  • Posted June 21, 2009

    more from this reviewer

    I Also Recommend:

    Fun Book

    I loved the characters, the style of writing was good also. After reading other books this was like a fresh breath of air. This is a great summer book! If you haven't read it I suggest you do.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted June 20, 2009

    Great Read

    This book is one of the best i have read. A great book if you like romance and novels, I couldn't put this book down.

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  • Posted June 20, 2009

    Couldn't put it down

    As always, Wiggs writes a very engrossing story. Even the supporting characters capture your heart.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted June 7, 2009

    What happened?

    I love all of Susan Wiggs' books, but this one was not like all the others...it was boring. The two main characters didn't even have a conversation with each other until after page 200. I was excited to read this book, as the first chapter was great and I had read it before in a preview from another one of her books. I was really disappointed with the long, drawn-out plot, etc...

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  • Anonymous

    Posted May 18, 2009

    Wonderfull

    This was the first time I have read a book by Susan Wiggs. Just Breathe is a wonderful book!! I loved every minute of it!! It is a must read book!!

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  • Posted May 10, 2009

    more from this reviewer

    Easy Read

    I'll keep this short. First time reading Susan Wiggs for me and I loved it. It was an easy and pleasant read. A cute and tender story. A little heartbreaking at times but has a happy ending. They need to make a movie!

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  • Posted April 10, 2009

    more from this reviewer

    I Also Recommend:

    Settling into life is just a breath away!

    This book was filled with so many great laughs, truths, and more. Sarah's handling of her changing life was at times funny, maddening, sweet, and even a bit tearful. Her grandmother and aunt were a great compliment to the story as was her comic strip "other life." Sarah's outward hesitance, fears, skepticism and more weren't frustrating to the reader because you could feel these things for her as you became involved in her life. Will was really a prince charming in ordinary clothing. And even Aurora was delightful--and that's true even though there were times you wanted to strangle her. Susan Wiggs created a place for the reader to feel like more than just a casual observer with these characters.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted March 10, 2009

    Did not enjoy this book

    I am a big fan of Susan Wiggs and have read many of her books, however, this was the worst one I have read. It seemed like it was written by someone else. The story dragged, was predictable, and I did not like the depressing plot. I had to force myself to finish it. I didn't really care for any of the characters either. Not recommended.

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