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If Love Were All: A Novel
 
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If Love Were All: A Novel [Hardcover]

Judith Henry Wall (Author)
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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Book Description

August 10, 1998

A novel for anyone who remembers first love -- and who wonders what might have been...

There is life after death. Or at least that is what one recently widowed woman discovers in this poignant and contemporary novel about old love lost and new love found.

After twenty-seven years of being a devoted wife and mother, Charlotte Haberman suddenly finds herself alone. With the death of her husband after a long, painful struggle with cancer and all three of her children off to college, Charlotte realizes that she is not only alone -- she is free. And she is young enough at forty-seven to want more than memories.

She had loved and admired her husband, Stan, as did almost everyone else in their small Nebraska town where he ran the local newspaper. He was a truly good man, and an especially good father. Now, as Charlotte grieves, she also forces herself to look ahead to a future as a single woman. But her three children are devastated by his loss; they can't imagine life without him, and they can't imagine their mother's life with anyone else. They resist any suggestion that she might eventually date other men, and are horrified when Charlotte announces she is going to sell the family home.

Nervous about the future, but determined not to be buried with her husband, Charlotte remains firm in her resolve to start over again with or without the approval of her children. First however she must banish a memory that will not die: Cory Lee Jones, the boy she loved before Stan. She had known Cory Lee for only one summer, but she remembers it as the most glorious and most passionate summer of her life, never forgotten and perhaps never gotten over. But Cory Lee went to Vietnam, and when he returned to America, he did not come back to Charlotte. Free now to explore the past, she sets out with renewed purpose, both to find him and to put to rest at last any lingering doubts about what might have been.

In the course of her search, Charlotte encounters many obstacles -- the romantic problems of her children (especially Suzanne, the youngest, who recently suffered a miscarriage, and whose hopes for a career as a doctor are put on indefinite hold when she marries), her sister's disintegrating marriage, and her mother's sour disapproval of virtually everything Charlotte says and does. In between, there are her own entanglements -- a brief, bittersweet romance with a younger man who reminds her more than she'd like to admit of Cory Lee, and a genuine, gradual attraction between her and a retired military officer. And finally there is Cory Lee himself, to whom she makes a final pilgrimage in her search for herself, so that at last she can get on with her life.

With a warm, appealing heroine who unflinchingly faces every curve life throws her way, If Love Were All will speak to any woman who has ever yearned for a midlife romantic adventure, or daydreamed about her first love.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Taking its title from one of Wallace Stevens's great laments of marital disappointment, Wall's fifth novel (after Mother Love) concerns 47-year-old schoolteacher and widow Charlotte Haberman, who shocks her three college-age children by selling their small-town Nebraska house eight months after the death of her husband, Stan. A newspaperman, Stan was deified by both the community and his offspring, who also idealize their parents' 27-year marriage. What the siblings don't know is that each of their parents had a never-talked-about past: Stan's previous marriage was a subject he avoided, as was Charlotte's first love and the source of her hidden heartbreak, a soldier named Cory Lee Jones, who broke up with her when he was in Vietnam. Now, Charlotte is determined to find out whatever happened to Cory Lee. More important, though, she is aware that she can, for the first time, reach out for what she wants instead of settling for what comes her way. The moral of this gentle tale, that one must choose one's own life and accept disillusionment and disappointment with grace, goes down easily, while the perils of self-denial are played out convincingly by secondary characters. A subplot involving a crisis of conscience for Charlotte over a term paper by one of her students that offends the staunchly Christian community proves to open one door as others close. If at times the Haberman children's overprotectiveness of Charlotte sounds too extreme to be true, Wall's simple prose brings gossipy, claustrophobic, Newberg, Neb., gracefully to life.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Widowed at 47, Charlotte finds herself restless, wanting more, yet unsure of her future. Having always lived as someone else's daughter, wife, or mother, she sees an opportunity to define herself in her own terms. Opposed by her family, especially her three grown children, she begins to break out of her accustomed roles and explore what she wants out of life. As she changes, so do her relationships, often creating tensions and some pain. Charlotte, however, realizes that while she will always love her family, she cannot be responsible for anyone's happiness but her own. Wall (Blood Sisters, LJ 10/15/92) effectively portrays both the positive and negative sides of family bonds and demonstrates the difficulty of staging even the smallest rebellion against long-held expectations. Recommended for public libraries.?Barbara E. Kemp, SUNY at Albany Libs.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster (August 10, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 068483765X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0684837659
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.3 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,744,111 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.3 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A fine story of courage against almost overwhelming odds., February 8, 1999
By 
This review is from: If Love Were All: A Novel (Hardcover)
The negative review above, written by the reader from Pennsylvania, finally persuaded me that people as frightened, narrow-minded and selfish as the ones depicted in this book, and towns dominated by such people, must still exist in the modern United States. But even as I read, convinced that Judith Wall's portrait of life in a small Nebraska town was overdrawn, I was fascinated. Ms. Wall can write.

And the "soap" dig in the Kirkus review above, probably written by some over-educated, actually quite unsophisticated, recent graduate of Vassar, is quite undeserved--unless, that is, you consider sad, complex, lifelike dramas of courage in the face of almost overwhleming odds typical soap opera fare.

This very well-written, gripping book has only one flaw that I can see, and I may, again, be refusing to face reality. Charlotte, the appealing, confused, stubborn and very attractive heroine of this story has no friends, no allies, absolutely no one on her side. Could this be? Are there really places and people that bad? I do sincerely hope not.

I told my wife, who is tougher than I am, something about this book as I was reading it and she said, "Why doesn't she tell 'em to shove it and take off?" Well, I can see why she doesn't, and that's one of the things that makes the book so good--Charlotte is herself part of this milieu, and, no matter how she tries, she can't help seeing things from the point of view of her tormentors.

Oh, yes, this is a very good book.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A special book that moves the heart, June 30, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: If Love Were All: A Novel (Hardcover)
Charlotte Haberman loved her spouse Stan, a newspaper owner-operator. So did their three children and just about every resident of Newberg, Nebraska who felt Stan was a great person. When Stan dies after twenty-seven years of marriage, Charlotte and her children mourn their loss as do most of the townsfolk.

However, Charlotte decides to do the unthinkable. She sells their home and begins a quest to find out what happened to her first love, Cory Lee Jones, who ended their relationship while serving in Nam. For the first time in three decades, Charlotte is doing something for herself. She needs to know if there remains any spark, not so much for the present or future, but for what could have been an alternate life for her if Cory had returned to her.

This is an amiable tale that provides readers with interesting insight into moral dilemmas. Charlotte, her children, and the deceased Stan are all great characters, who feel like any functioning family. However, it is the poignant story line with its multiple messages that make this must reading for fans of modern mainstream fiction. The relationship walls that individuals hide behind are brilliantly but effortlessly peeled away by the talented Judith Henry Wall.

Harriet Klausner

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful Story, July 13, 2003
By 
This review is from: If Love Were All: A Novel (Hardcover)
I had never heard of Judith Henry Wall. I came across her book in my local library. I read it in one day! More often than not I find myself flipping to the last few pages of a book to see how it ends because I have become bored with what I am reading, or I can see the outcome in the first two chapters. Not so with this well written novel. Wall has taken the things in life we all must face in time and woven them into a well defined story line. Charlotee Haberman is a woman in change, Her husband has died and she wants to sell the family home and move into a smaller place. This does not set well with her three grown children. Besides them she must deal with a difficult mother and a sister who has her own corss to bear. I expected it to end one way but was not disspointed when it ended quite another. I admit I cried more than once while reading it. I had flash backs to my own life and relationships and home, places and people that are no more. Let the nay sayers have their time at bat.. however I think you will enjoy reading this book, and gain some insight to your life along the way.
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