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Kristin Hannah - Summer Island

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Summer Island: summary, description and annotation

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Years ago, Nora Bridge walked out on her marriage and left her daughters behind. Now she is a famous talk show host. Her daughter Ruby is a struggling comedienne. The two havent spoken in more than a decade. Then a scandal from Noras past is exposed, and Ruby is offered a fortune to write a tell-all about her mother. Reluctantly, she returns to the family house on Summer Island, a home filled with frayed memories of joy and heartache. Confronting a past that includes a never-forgotten love, a sick best friend, and a mother who has harbored terrible family secrets, Ruby finally begins to understand the complex ties that bind a mother and daughterand the healing that comes with forgiveness.From the Paperback edition.

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Summer Island
Summer Island

SUMMER ISLAND

Kristin Hannah

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The author of the cherished bestseller On Mystic Lake returns with a poignant, funny, luminous novel about a mother and daughter--the complex ties that bind them, the past that separates them, and the healing that comes with forgiveness.

Years ago, Nora Bridge walked out on her marriage and left her daughters behind. She has since become a famous radio talk-show host and newspaper columnist beloved for her moral advice. Her youngest daughter, Ruby, is a struggling comedienne who uses her famous mother as fuel for her bitter, cynical humor. When the tabloids unearth a scandalous secret from Nora's past, their estrangement suddenly becomes dramatic: Nora is injured in an accident and a glossy magazine offers Ruby a fortune to write a tell-all about her mother. Under false pretenses, Ruby returns home to take care of the woman she hasn't spoken to for almost a decade.

Nora insists they retreat to Summer Island in the San Juans, to the lovely old house on the water where Ruby grew up, a place filled with childhood memories of love and joy and belonging. There Ruby is also reunited with her first love and his brother. Once, the three of them had been best friends, inseparable. Until the summer that Nora had left and everyone's hearts had been broken....

What began as an expose evolves, as Ruby writes, into an exploration of her family's past. Nora is not the woman Ruby has hated all these years. Witty, wise, and vulnerable, she is desperate to reconcile with her daughter. As the magazine deadline draws near and Ruby finishes what has begun to seem to her an act of brutal betrayal, she is forced to grow up and at last to look at her mother--and herself--through the eyes of a woman. And she must, finally, allow herself to love.

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Acknowledgments

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Thanks to Gina Centrello, Shauna Summers, George Fisher, and the whole Ballantine team for making 2000 so memorable.

Thank? to Chip Gibson, Steve FLoss, Andrew Martin, Joan DeMayo, Barbara Marks, Whitney Cookman, Alison Gross, and every-one at Crown Publishers.

Thanks to Kim Pisk for keeping me (as much as possible) on track.

Thanks to Ann Patty and Megan Chance again, for everything.

Last but not least, thanks to my family. I was blessed to be born into a great clan. So, here's to Kent and Laura and Dad. We're lucky to be friends as well as family.

And to the Canadian contingentUncle Frank, Aunt Toni, Leslie, Jacqui, Dana, and, of course, toJohnsie, the first storyteller.

And most important, to Tucker and Benjamin, who teach me a little more about love every day.

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Part One

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"There is only the right to recover what has been lost

And found and lost again and again: and now under conditions

That seem unpropitious. But perhaps neither gain nor loss.

For us, there is only the trying. The rest is not our business.

-T. S. ELLIOT, FROM EAST COKER

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Summer Island
Chapter One

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An early evening rain had fallen. In the encroaching darkness, the streets of Seattle lay like mirrored strips between the glittering gray high-rises.

The dot-com revolution had changed this once quiet city, and even after the sun had set, the clattering, hammering sounds of construction beat a constant rhythm. Buildings sprouted overnight, it seemed, reaching higher and higher into the soggy sky. Purple-haired kids with nose rings and ragged clothes zipped through downtown in brand-new, bright-red Ferraris.

On a corner lot in the newly fashionable neighborhood of Belltown, there was a squat, wooden-sided structure that used to sit alone. It had been built almost one hundred years earlier, when few people had wanted to live so far from the heart of the city.

The owners of radio station KJZZ didnt care that they no longer fit in this trendy area. For fifty years they had broadcast from this lot. They had grown from a scrappy local station to Washingtons largest.

Part of the reason for their current wave of success was Nora Bridge, the newest sensation in talk radio.

Although her show, Spiritual Healing with Nora, had been in syndication for less than a year, it was already a bona fide hit. Advertisers and affiliates couldnt write checks fast enough, and her weekly newspaper advice column, Nora Knows Best, had never been more popular. It appeared in more than 2,600 papers nationwide.

Nora had started her career as a household hints adviser for a small-town newspaper, but hard work and a strong vision had moved her up the food chain. The women of Seattle had been the first to discover her unique blend ofpassion and morality; the rest of the country had soon followed.

Reviewers claimed that she could see a way through any emotional conflict; more often than not, they mentioned the purity of her heart.

But they were wrong. It was the impurity in her heart that made her successful. She was an ordinary woman whod made extraordinary mistakes. She under-stood every nuance of need and loss.

There was never a time in her life, barely even a moment, when she didnt remember what shed lost. What shed thrown away. Each night she brought her own regrets to the microphone, and from that wellspring of sorrow, she found compassion.

She had managed her career with laserlike focus, carefully feeding the press a palatable past. Even the previous week when People magazine had featured her on the cover, there had been no investigative story on her life. She had covered her tracks well. Her fans knew shed been divorced and that she had grown daughters. The hows and whys of her familys destruction remainedthankfullyprivate.

Tonight, Nora was on the air. She scooted her wheeled chair closer to the microphone and adjusted her headphones. A computer screen showed her the list of callers on hold. She pushed line two, which read: Marge/motherdaughter probs.

Hello and welcome, Marge, youre on the air with Nora Bridge. Whats on your mind this evening?

Hello... Nora? The caller sounded hesitant, a little startled at actually hearing her voice on the air after waiting on hold for nearly an hour.

Nora smiled, although only her producer could see it. Her fans, shed learned, were often anxious. She lowered her voice, gentled it. How can I help you, my friend?

Im having a little trouble with my daughter, Suki. The callers flattened vowels identified her as a midwesterner.

How old is Suki, Marge?

Sixty-seven this November.

Nora laughed. I guess some things never change, eh, Marge?

Not between mothers and daughters. Suki gave me my first gray hair when I was thirty years old. Now I look like Colonel Sanders.

Noras laugh was quieter this time. At forty-nine, she no longer found gray hair a laughing matter. So, Marge, whats the problem with Suki?

Well. Marge made a snorting sound. Last week she went on one of those singles cruisesyou know the ones, where they all wear Hawaiian shirts and drink purple cocktails? Anyway, today, she told me shes getting married again to a man she met on the boat. At her age. She snorted again, then paused. I know she wanted me to be happy for her, but how could I? Sukis a flibbertigibbet. My Tommy and I were married for seventy years.

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