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The alarm on Hallie's biological clock is buzzing. She's hitting the big three-O and there's no prospect of marriage, no man in sight. Hallie, an organized, goal-setting kind of person, gives herself a year to meet Mr. Knight...In Shining Armor. But all her dates are disasters. (There's the cheapskate and the sex fiend and...well, never mind.)
Too bad she can't just fall for her good-looking neighbor Steve Marris--who's definitely not her type. Anyway, Steve's busy trying to win back his ex-wife, Mary Lynn, who's busy getting married--but not to Steve. Life would be so much simpler if he could fall for someone else. Like...Hallie. They're friends, though--and sometimes friends become lovers. Sometimes friends become more.
The dating game is always the same. One disaster after another. Fortunately, Hallie McCarthy can compare notes with her neighbor, Steve Marris. He's divorced and in the same boat. With his help, Hallie develops a campaign to find Mr. Right--too bad Hallie and Steve are not interested in each other! Original. (Fiction--Romance)
Starting Now
January 1
A new year generally starts out with me writing a few inspiring lines about how I'm going to lose five pounds — let's be honest, it's ten — and pay off all my credit cards and other high expectations like that. It's the same every January. But this year's going to be different. Oh, I still want to lose those extra pounds, more than ever, but for a different reason.
I want a husband. And eventually a family. And that means I need a plan. Being a goal-oriented person, I usually begin by identifying what I'm after (MARRIAGE!!) and then I work out a logical procedure for getting it. Which, in this case, includes looking good. (Not that I look bad now, if I do say so myself. But I'm talking really good. Are you listening, thighs?) Because, as I've learned in advertising, packaging counts.
Putting all this into words is something of an eye-opener for me. I've come a long way from those college days when I refused to give in to what I called the "female escape route," like some of my friends. Cassie, Jamie, Rita and Jane all got married within six months of graduation, and as far as I could see, the only reason they did was because they found the real world more of a challenge than they'd anticipated, and used marriage as a cop-out.
Not me. Oh, no, marriage was much too conventional for me. I wanted to kick some butt in the business world first. Make a name for myself with my very own graphic arts firm. And I've done it! Now I feel like I've come full circle. I've accomplished a lot, and I won't minimize my achievements, but this Christmas I realized there's more to life than getting the Woman of the Year award from the Chamber of Commerce.
So, last week I made the decision: Marriage! It's time to let a man into my life. Until now I've viewed relationships like dessert. Nice occasionally, but not with every meal. My friends have been tossing potential husbands in my direction for years, and I've frustrated them again and again.
I'm too picky, that's what Rita says. Not true. I have my standards; every woman does. But my work's the reason I haven't married. I've poured my heart into making a success of Artistic License. For the past six years my focus, my talent and all my energy have been with the business. It's filled every waking minute.
Then, this Christmas it hit me. I want more. I suspect this has something to do with losing Dad last June. Mom's still struggling, but then so are Julie and I. The holidays were really hard without him. Somehow, the celebration seemed empty and sad, and we were all kind of weepy thinking about the Christmas things he used to do — getting the tree every year and making a big deal out of hanging the decorations Julie and I made when we were kids. Reading the Nativity story on Christmas Eve. Putting on his Santa apron to carve the turkey. Things like that.
I'm so sorry Dad missed his granddaughter's first Christmas. I knew Julie's baby would help Mom through the grieving process, but I didn't expect little Ellen to have such a profound effect on me.
I've always thought of myself as the strong independent type. I haven't wanted a man around for fear I might be forced to admit I need someone. I don't know why I'm like this. (Then again, I'm not sure I want to know, either.) The point is, I feel differently now.
It started when Julie gave me the baby to rock. I swear my heart melted when I held her. In that moment I felt something I can only describe as maternal instinct, and I realized this is what I want. This is what's been missing from my life. A husband, a family.
With the right husband, I know I can have it all. Home, family and career. Plenty of women do it, and I can, too. Funny how a little thing like holding a baby can change a person's attitude. I'm ready. Past ready. Starting now, my life's taken an abrupt turn. What was vital a month ago has shifted to the back burner.
So, yes, I admit it.
I want a husband and children. Obviously, what I need first is the man. (I plan to do things in the right order!)
Mom always says that once I make up my mind I don't let anything stand in my way. I've set my goal, made my plans, and I figure I should find a husband in two, three months, tops. This time next year, I expect to be a married woman. (Maybe even a pregnant one!)
Just how difficult can it be?
Sweat rolled down Hallie McCarthy's forehead, dripping in her eyes and momentarily blurring her vision. Using the towel draped around her neck, she wiped her brow. Although she'd promised herself she wouldn't, Hallie glanced at the timer on the treadmill.
One minute left.
Sixty short seconds. She could endure that. With a renewed sense of purpose, she picked up her pace and waited impatiently for the buzzer.
The treadmill had all the bells and whistles, as it should, considering what she'd paid for it (plus the three designer running suits, color-coordinated with the treadmill). At the end of her workout a digital message would flash across the four-inch computer screen, complimenting her on a job well-done.
Donnalee had suggested she join a gym to meet men, and she would, Hallie told herself, once she was at her goal weight. But not now. She wasn't about to go prancing around a gym with thighs that resembled ham hocks. Which, she supposed, was something like cleaning her house before the cleaning lady arrived — but she'd done that, too.
Huffing, her heart feeling ready to explode, Hallie gripped the sides of the treadmill as the timer counted down those final seconds. This last minute was proving to be the longest of her life.
Needing a distraction to take her mind off the physical agony while she raced toward an imaginary finish line, Hallie turned to look out her living-room window at the luxury condominium next door.
Hey, she was getting a new neighbor. A moving van was parked in front and a crew of able-bodied men — very able-bodied, she noted appreciatively — unloaded its contents.A big truck that probably required a step stool to climb into was parked behind it. The license-plate frame was one of those customized ones. Squinting, she was able to make out the words: BIG TRUCK. BIG TOOLS. Hallie groaned aloud and rolled her eyes. Men and their egos! Two muscular guys wandered into her line of vision, and she wondered if one of those good-looking hunks might be her neighbor.
Willow Woods, the condominium complex where she'd moved six months earlier, had all but sold out. She'd speculated it wouldn't take long for the place next to hers to sell. Especially since it was a three-bedroom unit, the most spacious design available. Must be a family moving in. She was definitely cheered by the thought of having neighbors.
The timer went off, and the treadmill ground to a halt. Hallie heaved a sigh of relief and rubbed her sweat-drenched face with the towel. Her cheeks felt red and hot and her short curly hair was matted against her temples. Her old gray sweats — she didn't feel comfortable sweating in her new color-coordinated ones — were loose around the waist. A promising sign. The temptation to run into the bathroom and leap on the scale was strong, but she'd made that mistake too often and vowed she'd only weigh herself once a week. Monday morning, bright and early — that was when she'd do it.
She'd lost five pounds in twenty-one days. The first two had fallen away easily, but the last three had been like chiseling at a concrete block with a tablespoon. She'd starved herself, exercised faithfully. She'd counted fat grams, carbohydrates, calories and chocolate chips to little avail.
Her best friend, Donnalee Cooper, claimed Hallie was putting too much stock in the physical, but Hallie believed otherwise. It was that packaging thing again. The men she knew based their reactions to women — at least their initial reactions — on looks. It didn't matter if the woman had a brain in her head as long as her waist was tiny and her other assets weren't. Of course, attracting a man wasn't Hallie's only incentive for becoming physically fit. She didn't exercise nearly enough, had taken to skipping breakfast and was downing fast food on the run. Not a healthy lifestyle. Donnalee seemed unconvinced when Hallie explained this, though, pointing out that she hadn't worried about her health before.
Donnalee was single, although she'd had a brief disastrous marriage in her early twenties. To Hallie's delight, when she'd shared her goal of finding a man and marrying within the next twelve months, Donnalee had decided to join forces with her. She said that she'd never meant to wait this long to remarry, and like Hallie, she wanted children. But Donnalee brought a different strategy to their marriage campaign.
"Just be yourself," she'd advised.
"Being myself hasn't attracted a whole lot of attention so far," Hallie complained. That, at least, shut her friend up. Dating opportunities had dwindled to a trickle in the last few years, but she was determined to improve the situation.
Hallie showered and changed clothes, then phoned her mother who lived across Puget Sound in Bremerton, on the Kitsap Peninsula. Hallie and her father had been close, both in personality and in appearance, but it was from her mother that she'd inherited her artistic talent. Despite her ability, Lucille McCarthy had never worked outside the home. It had always troubled Hallie that a woman so genuinely talented would be content to do little more than keep house. Not until she was an adult living on her own did she recognize her mother's contribution to the family. Over the months since her father's sudden death, Hallie had come to appreciate her mother's quiet strength. At Christmas, she'd encouraged her to take up oil painting, and Lucille had recently begun a class.
The conversation went well, with Lucille cheerfully describing the portrait she'd started to paint of a sleeping Ellen. Afterward, Hallie wrote her weekly grocery list, threw on a jacket and hurried out the door, eager to finish her Saturday-morning chores. It was when she climbed into her car that she saw her new neighbor. At least, she thought he was the one. He was tall and not as brawny as she'd thought at first glance. Solid, she decided. All shoulders, with good upper-body strength. Handsome, too, in an unobtrusive way. In other words, seeing him didn't make her heart beat faster — which was just as well, since he was obviously married with children.
He did have an interesting face, a lived-in face, and seemed the type of person she'd like to know. Not romantically, of course, but maybe as a friend. She turned her attention from him to the two kids at his side. A girl and boy, who were probably about eleven and nine. Great-looking kids. The girl waved, her smile wide and friendly.
Hallie waved back, inserted the key into the ignition and drove off.
Excerpted from This Matter Of Marriage by Debbie Macomber Copyright © 2005 by Debbie Macomber. 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.
I love reading this book so much! I have read most of Debbie Macomber's books and this is one of my favourites!
9 out of 9 people found this review helpful.
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Posted March 16, 2010
This was a terrific story that is modern day. She dates so many losers, and I crack a rib laughing at all her stories, to finally fall in love with her neighbor/friend. I couldn't put the book down once I started it. It's definately worth the read!
8 out of 8 people found this review helpful.
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Posted March 18, 2011
The characters were well developed. However they seemded to spend too much of the book not knowing their true feelings for each other. Hallie was main character but one gets to see more of the happpiness of the best freinds. I would rather have had more details of how things went for Hallie than the best friends. When Hallie gets together with Steve the book ends. I like Jayne Krentz romance style more. I lkie to see more of the happily ever after detailed
4 out of 5 people found this review helpful.
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Posted August 3, 2011
It was very entertaining and funny in spots. I looked forward to picking it up everyday.
3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.YoK2Tog
Posted September 3, 2010
I had so much fun losing myself in the characters of this book. It was very had to put down. I found myself sneaking peeks at the pages on my phone throughout the day, because I kept thinking about what's happening with Hallie! WONDERFUL BOOK!
3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Lynne99
Posted July 3, 2010
This book is enjoyable to read. The characters were believable and entertaining. The plot was a little predictable but, nonetheless, the story was one I wanted to keep on reading. I would recommend this book for others to read. If you like a romantic tale with some humor added in... you will like this one.
3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
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Posted February 10, 2008
I enjoyed this book so much! I have read most of Debbie Macombers book and this is now one of my favorites! Great characters. Cute story!
3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
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Posted February 7, 2006
I love all of Debbie Macomber's books, and this one was one of my favorites. Her writing is so descriptive that you feel like you understand how the characters are feeling at that time in their life. I hope that she writes another book along this storyline of a young woman approaching 30, like me.
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted January 24, 2012
I really liked this story. I was sad when it ended. A great read!!
1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted December 18, 2011
I really enjoyed the characters and could not put my nook down until I completed this book.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted November 26, 2011
Not my usual read---LOVED IT!
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted February 25, 2012
Debbie is a writer with the "Christian moral code" in her mind. She can sell more books without being secular as some writers that I read.
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Posted February 16, 2012
Love all things Debbie!
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted February 15, 2012
This is a fun read about really trying to find the right guy. The heroine kisses a few toads on the way, and we know early on who the prince is. But it's the journey that's funny and frustrating and...like life.
0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted February 10, 2012
Two short entertaining reads....
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Jumblejuls
Posted February 3, 2012
I had not read anything by Debbie Macomber before, but definately will in the future.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.BecBond
Posted January 26, 2012
Love Debbie Macomber and this book was no exception. She has never disappointed me with her books. They are always filled with life lessons and love. Great read!
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.1499927
Posted October 19, 2011
Loved the story! It was both funny and serious. Very enjoyable.
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Posted October 15, 2011
It is typical of her books no real surprises but it was an enjoyable read. It is not "heavy" enough for a book discussion.
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Posted October 13, 2011
Just finished reading this book, it was wonderful just like all of the Debbie Macomber book! I would recommend any and all of her books!!
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Overview
The alarm on Hallie's biological clock is buzzing. She's hitting the big three-O and there's no prospect of marriage, no man in sight. Hallie, an organized, goal-setting kind of person, gives herself a year to meet Mr. Knight...In Shining Armor. But all her dates are disasters. (There's the cheapskate and the sex fiend and...well, never mind.)
Too bad she can't just fall for her good-looking neighbor Steve Marris--who's definitely not her type. Anyway, Steve's busy trying to win back his ex-wife, Mary Lynn, who's busy getting married--but not to Steve. Life would be so much simpler if he could fall for someone else. Like...Hallie. They're friends, ...