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Nicholas Sparks - Three Weeks With My Brother

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Nicholas Sparks Three Weeks With My Brother

Three Weeks With My Brother: summary, description and annotation

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From Publishers Weekly When bestselling author Sparks (*The Notebook*; *Message in a Bottle*; etc.) receives a brochure offering a three-week trip around the world, its not hard for him to persuade Micah, his older brother, to join him in touring Guatemalas Mayan ruins, Perus Incan temples, Easter Island, the killing fields in Cambodia, the Taj Mahal and Ethiopian rock cathedrals. His account of the trip is refreshingly honest and perceptive. At each stop, the brothers, both deeply committed to their families, cover the crucial moments in a life full of familial love and tragedy: Nicks role as the middle child always feeling left out; his marriage in 1989; the loss of Nick and Micahs mother two months later after a horseback riding accident; the death of Nicks first baby and the physical problems of his second son; the death of their father in a car accident; and the passing of their younger sister from a brain tumor. As the brothers travel together through these mythical sites and share candid thoughts, they find themselves stunned by fates turns, realizing that a peaceful moment may be shattered at any time. Weaving in vignettes of tenderness and loss with travelogue-like observations, Sparkss account shows how he and his brother both evolved on this voyage. Somehow there was a chance we could help each other, and in that way, I began to think of the trip less as a journey around the world than a journey to rediscover who I was and how I? developed the way I did. Copyright Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From Booklist Who wouldnt want to go on a trip around the world? When best-selling novelist Sparks receives a travel brochure from his alma mater, Notre Dame, he thinks, If not now, then when? and asks his brother to join him. They both have family obligations, but this sounds like the trip of a lifetime, and as the reader soon finds out, they both need to relax. As they journey to faraway places, the brothers reminisce about their unusual childhood. Instead of the idealistic life readers may imagine, their early years were marked by poverty, although redeemed by their mothers great love. Their father was a graduate student working several jobs to support the family, and the boys, best friends as well as brothers, led an independent life filled with adventure, derring-do, and responsibilities beyond their years. This is a rare opportunity for readers to get to know a favorite author as Nicholas reveals the inspirations for his fiction. A must-read for Sparks fans as well as a treat for those who want to find out what makes a family strong. *Patty Engelmann* *Copyright American Library Association. All rights reserved*

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Copyright 2004 by Nicholas Sparks and Michael Sparks All rights reserved - photo 1

Copyright 2004 by Nicholas Sparks and Michael Sparks
All rights reserved.

Warner Books

Hachette Book Group USA

237 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017

Visit our Web site at HachetteBookGroupUSA.com.

First eBook Edition: April 2004

ISBN: 978-0-7595-1033-3

Three Weeks with
My Brother

The Notebook Message in a Bottle A Walk to Remember The Rescue A Bend in the - photo 2

The Notebook

Message in a Bottle

A Walk to Remember

The Rescue

A Bend in the Road

Nights in Rodanthe

The Guardian

The Wedding

For our family, with love

A friend is always loyal, and a brother is born to help in the time of need.

Proverbs 17:17

T here are always so many people to thank when it comes to writing a book and - photo 3

T here are always so many people to thank when it comes to writing a book, and as always, the names are much the same.

First, we have to thank our wives, Cathy and Christine, without whom this book never would have been possible.

And our childrenMiles, Ryan, Landon, Lexie, and Savannah (Nicholass) and Alli and Peyton (Micahs). Life without them is impossible to imagine.

Also no less gratitude goes to Theresa Park of Sanford Greenburger and Jamie Raab of Warner Books, our agent and editor respectively. Its been a dream working with them.

Larry Kirshbaum and Maureen Egen, the CEO and president of Warner Books, were kind enough to believe in the project, and deserve our thanks as well.

Jennifer Romanello, Edna Farley, Emi Battaglia, Julie Barer, Shannon OKeefe, Peter McGuigan, Scott Schwimer, Howie Sanders, Richard Green, Flag, Denise DiNovi, Lynn Harris, Mark Johnson, Courtenay Valenti, and all the rest deserve our thanks as well for various roles they played in the project.

And finally, thanks to the staff and crew of TCS, as well as our fellow traveling companions, including the wonderful Bob and Kate Devlin. It was wonderful traveling with all of you.

T his book came about because of a brochure I received in the mail in the spring of 2002.

It was a typical day in the Sparks household. Id spent a good part of the morning and early afternoon working on my novel Nights in Rodanthe, but it hadnt gone well and I was struggling to put the day behind me. I hadnt written as much as Id intended nor did I have any idea what I would write the following day, so I wasnt in the best of moods when I finally turned off the computer and called it quits for the afternoon.

It isnt easy living with an author. I know this because my wife has informed me of this fact, and she did so again that day. To be honest, its not the most pleasant thing to hear, and while it would be easy to get defensive, Ive come to understand that arguing with her about it has never solved anything. So instead of denying it, Ive learned to take her hands, look her in the eyes, and respond with those three magic words that every woman wants to hear:

Youre right, sweetheart.

Some people believe that because Ive been relatively successful as an author, writing must come effortlessly to me. Many people imagine that I jot down ideas as they come to me for a few hours each day, then spend the rest of my time relaxing by the pool with my wife while we discuss our next exotic vacation.

In reality, our lives arent much different from that of your average middle-class family. We dont have a staff of servants or travel extensively, and while we do have a pool in the backyard surrounded by pool chairs, I cant remember a time that the chairs have ever been used, simply because neither my wife nor I have much time during the day to sit around doing nothing. For me, the reason is my work. For my wife, the reason is family. Or more specifically, kids.

We have five children, you see. Not a big number if we were pioneers, but these days its enough to raise a few eyebrows. Last year, when my wife and I were on a trip, we happened to strike up a conversation with another young couple. One topic led to another, and finally the subject of kids came up. That couple had two kids and mentioned their names; my wife rattled off the names of ours.

For a moment, the conversation ground to a halt while the other woman tried to figure out whether shed heard us correctly.

You have five kids? the woman finally asked.

Yes.

She laid a sympathetic hand on my wifes shoulder.

Are you insane?

Our sons are twelve, ten, and four; our twin daughters are coming up on three, and while theres a lot that I dont know about the world, I do know that kids have a funny way of helping you keep things in perspective. The older ones know that I write novels for a living, though I sometimes doubt that either of them understands what it means to create a work of fiction. For instance, when my ten-year-old was asked during a class presentation what his father did for a living, he puffed his chest out and proudly declared, My daddy plays on the computer all day! My oldest son, on the other hand, often tells mewith utter solemnitythat, Writing is easy. Its just the typing thats hard.

I work out of the house as many authors do, but thats where the resemblance ends. My office isnt some upstairs, out-of-the-way sanctuary; instead, the door opens directly onto the living room. While Ive read that some authors must have a quiet house in order to concentrate, Im fortunate that Ive never needed silence to work. Its a good thing, I suppose, or I never would have ever written at all. Our house, you have to understand, is a whirlwind of activity literally from the moment my wife and I get out of bed until the moment we collapse back into it at the end of the day. Spending the day at our home is enough to exhaust just about anyone. First off, our kids have energy. Lots and lots of energy. Ridiculous amounts of energy. Multiplied by five, its enough energy to power the city of Cleveland. And the kids somehow magically feed off each others energy, each consuming and mirroring the others. Then our three dogs feed off it, and then the house itself seems to feed on it. A typical day includes: at least one sick child, toys strewn from one end of the living room to the other that magically reappear the moment after theyve been put away, dogs barking, kids laughing, the phone ringing off the hook, FedEx and UPS deliveries coming and going, kids whining, lost homework, appliances breaking, school projects due tomorrow that our children somehow forget to tell us about until the last minute, baseball practice, gymnastics practice, football practice, Tae Kwon Do practice, repairmen coming and going, doors slamming, kids running down the hallway, kids throwing things, kids teasing each other, kids asking for snacks, kids crying because they fell, kids cuddling up on your lap, or kids crying because they need you RIGHT THIS MINUTE! When my in-laws leave after visiting for a week, they cant get to the airport soon enough. There are deep bags under their eyes and they carry the dazed, shell-shocked expression of veterans who just survived the landing on Omaha Beach. Instead of saying good-bye, my father-in-law shakes his head and whispers, Good luck. Youre going to need it.

My wife accepts all of this activity in the house as normal. Shes patient and seldom gets flustered. My wife seems to actually enjoy it most of the time. My wife, I might add, is a saint.

Either that, or maybe she is

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