But 50 years later, when Pasquale, the now elderly hotel owner, shows up in Michael Deane's office in Hollywood with a plan to find Dee, an unlikely group of film addicts band together to find the once-dying actress.
And like all good romances, the ending is happily ever after. But man, I rarely read this kind of "fluff," and while I suppose this was better than average fluff, Walters attempts to appease the literary types and throws in a couple of references to the greats, like this quote from Kundera, which seems to easily sum up the novel's theme: "There would seem to be nothing more obvious, more tangible and palpable than the present moment. And yet it eludes us completely. All the sadness of life lies in that fact."Too often we're concerned with the past or the future, and miss our present opportunities completely. While the characters of the novel seem to have learned this lesson, they are powerless to revise its paradox.
Maybe I'm just ready for summer and needed a beach read sans the beach (there was frost this morning). Nonetheless, I would recommend this to all you romance readers out there, but I'm off to find something a little more gritty and realistic.
If you would've known before hand that this was a romance novel would you have read it? Does this novel make you want to read more romances? I agree with you on the type of book though, romances just aren't interesting. The sappiness of the story usually ruins what the point of the story is, but from the way you describe it the book seems interesting.
ReplyDeleteDayna, I judge books by their covers (unfortunately) and I would not have read this if I had known it was a romance going in! I think I need to read some more "quality" or classics romances, such as Tolstoy's "Anna Karenina" (the movie was really good) before I can truly judge the genre as a whole. I would recommend this book if you're interested in the movie business!
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