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Summer Harbor: A Novel [Mass Market Paperback]

Susan Wilson (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

July 27, 2004
It was a beautiful New England beach town in which dreams were made, and love, like the tide, would fall and rise again....


Kiley Harris hasn't been to her family's summer home at Hawke's Cove for nearly twenty years. As a child, she couldn't wait to be reunited with her two best beach-house friends, Grainger Egan and Mack MacKenzie. Kiley and the boys were an unshakable trio -- sailing and swimming every day, playing cards on the porch at dusk, and sharing their dreams. But everything changed the summer before they left for college, when the boys' friendship turned to rivalry over Kiley -- with tragic results. Since then Kiley has been in self-imposed exile from the place she once loved so much. But now that her parents are ready to sell the property, Kiley feels compelled to return to Hawke's Cove with her teenage son Will and come face to face with the past...and with the man who may be Will's father.


"Summer Harbor" is a moving story of the frailties of youth, the wisdom that comes with age, and the never-ending mysteries of the heart.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Romantic Times" The undercurrent of romance will draw readers in.

About the Author

From the time I was a little girl, the word "writer" held a special significance to me. I loved the word. I loved the idea of making up stories. When I was about twelve, I bought a used Olivetti manual typewriter from a little hole in the wall office machine place in Middletown, CT called Peter's Typewriters. It weighed about twenty pounds and was probably thirty years old. I pounded out the worst kind of adolescent drivel, imposing my imaginary self on television heroes of the time: Bonanza, Man from U.N.C.L.E. and Star Trek.

Those are my earliest memories of my secret life of writing. For reasons I cannot really fathom, I never pursued writing as a vocation. Although I majored in English, I didn't focus on writing and it wasn't really until I was first married that I hauled out my old Olivetti and began to thump away at my first novel. This was, as I recall, an amorphous thinly plotted excercise in putting sentences together and has mercifully disappeared in some move or another. I didn't try anything more adventurous than some short stories and a lot of newsletters for various things I belonged to until we moved to Martha's Vineyard and I bought my first computer. My little "Collegiate 2" IBM computer was about as advanced as the Olivetti was in its heyday but it got me writing again and this time with some inner determination that I was going to succeed at this avocation. I tapped out two novels on this machine with its fussy little printer. Like the first one, these were wonderful absorbing exercises in learning how to write.

What happened then is the stuff of day time soap opera. Writing is a highly personal activity and for all of my life I'd kept it secret from everyone but my husband, who, at the time, called what I did nights after the kids went to bed, my "typing." Until, quite by accident, I discovered that here on the Vineyard nearly everyone has some avocation in the arts. Much to my delight, I discovered a fellow closet-writer in the mom of my kids' best friends. For the very first time in my life I could share the struggle with another person. I know now that writers' groups are a dime a dozen and I highly recommend the experience, but with my friend Carole, a serendipitious introduction to a "real writer", Holly Nadler, resulted in my association with my agent. Holly read a bit of my "novel" and liked what she read, suggested I might use her name and write to her former agent. I did and the rest, as they say, is history.

Not that it was an overnight success. The novel I'd shown Holly never even got sent to Andrea. But a third, shorter, more evolved work was what eventually grew into Beauty with the guidance of Andrea and her associates at the Jane Rotrosen Agency.

The moral of the story: keep at it. Keep writing the bad novels to learn how to write the good ones. And, yes, it does help to know someone. Andrea might have liked my work, but the path was oiled by the introduction Holly Nadler provided.

Hawke's Cove is my second published novel, although there is a "second" second novel in a drawer, keeping good company with the other "first" novels.


Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Pocket (July 27, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0743442334
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743442336
  • Product Dimensions: 6.6 x 3.8 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,341,581 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Summer Harbor, November 5, 2004
This review is from: Summer Harbor: A Novel (Mass Market Paperback)
When I picked up Summer Harbor by Susan Wilson, I couldn't put it down. I wanted to read it every chance I got. Questions were constantly building in my mind. The main question that kept haunting me was "who is will's father?" The plot wasn't rushed. The conflicts built up slowly, but when the climax occurred it left a shock to the reader.
Characters are portrayed realistically and are very likeable. Kiley Harris, a strong willed, independent, single mother internally battled her past. She and her parents traveled to Hawke's Cove every summer for eighteen years. In Hawke's Cove, Kiley met Mack McKenzie and Grainger Eagan. The trio did everything together until Kiley and Mack became romantically connected. Realizing she made a mistake, she moved on to Grainger. Mack became bitter and sailed out to sea, never to return again.
Two months after leaving Hawke's Cove, Kiley realized she was pregnant. When she had her son, Will, Kiley still promised never to return to that horrible place. Ironically, she was forced to go back to sell her aging father's house and boat. Kiley knew she would not only have to face Grainger Eagan, but relive her past. She would also have to explain that she had had a son who was conceived nineteen years ago.
The story line flowed well and it wasn't very predictable. It changed from good to bad quite frequently. Many problems were addressed but it showed how a persistent woman could over come many things. It focused on how hard it is to forget your past and move on. The descriptions in this book made me feel apart of Hawke's Cove. I often wondered if this were a real place. It makes you want to spend time in Hawke's Cove, New England. The people however were rather judgmental and rude; they didn't except outsiders.
I really enjoyed this book, and look forward to reading other books by Susan Wilson. The next book I plan to read by her is Beauty. Her writing style is similar to Barbara Delinsky and Sandra Brown. If you enjoy a good, easy to read romantic fiction, Summer Harbor by Susan Wilson is for you.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Refreshing read, December 7, 2003
By A Customer
I enjoyed this refreshing book and looked forward to reading it every chance I could get. Kiley's estrangement from Hawke's Cove was a poignant one.The setting in a small New England coastal village was wonderful. The relationship between Kiley and her son
Will was at the same time typical for a teenager and idealistic.
The story was not rushed. I have read too many books where the main characters make love too soon, then they regret it. While I am wondering why they did in the first place.

Also I am looking forward to reading more books by Susan Wilson.

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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars An Entertaining Summer Read, September 6, 2003
By A Customer
Summer Harbor was an enjoyable read, until the end. The characters were likable and I enjoyed being with them. Hawkes Cove was an interesting place to spend the summer, and the conflict was strong enough to keep me wondering how everything would turn out.

The characters struggled for thirty-three chapters to solve their problem of estrangement, and then, in the last three chapters, the prior thirty-three were tossed out and the characters became unrecognizable.

When I got to chapter thirty-four, the interesting heroine, Kiley Harris, turned into a hateful, shouting schizophrenic. Hot headed Grainger developed the patients of Job, and impulsive 18 year old Will started thinking and talking with the wisdom that forty years of living imparts. And instead of resolving the story conflict at the climax, the author increased it to "shrill." But then, in the last five pages, all story conflict was magically resolved.

On page 149 the author referred to a "deus ex machina," and in the last five pages put it to good use. It seemed as if God swooped down bringing fire to cleanse them all, and everyone lived happily ever after.

This is a good read, but has a contrived and unsatifying ending.

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First Sentence:
At the foot of the porch steps, the metal For Sale sign clattered in the breeze off the water. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Susan Wilson, Great Harbor, Grainger Egan, Kiley Harris, Miss Emily, Will Harris, August Races, Beetle Cat, Doc John, Maiden Cove, Toby Reynolds, Joe Green, Mattie Lou, Rollie Egan, Coast Guard, Emily Claridge, Farm Road, Overlook Bluff Road, Merchant Marine, Seaview Avenue, Don Henley, Seasaw Motel
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