Rating: 4 stars
Who Should Read this Book: Anyone who has found they feeling
slightly loss in this crazy world will appreciate what the main characters are
going through in this book. It’s a heartfelt story and can provide good insight
into life’s lessons.
Synopsis:
Rose, Bean,
and Cordy Andreas are three sisters who “love each other, but just don’t like
each other very much.” They are vastly different, while incredibly similar. All
three venture back to the house they grew up in Barnwell when they become
unlucky in life. While living at home again with their Shakespearean talking
father and kind, loving mother who is battling breast cancer, the three Andreas
sisters must learn to like each other while also learning to love themselves.
Thoughts:
This was a
heartwarming book, and I definitely saw myself relating to each sister’s
insecurity in one way or another. All three of the girls are struggling with
accepting themselves and each one has a secret that is hard for them to come
clean to. Rose is struggling with her fiancé and the fact that they may want
different things, Bean is coming back from New York with mounds of debt and a
low self-esteem, and Cordy struggles with being pregnant and how her drifting
from place to place isn’t getting her anywhere anymore.
There were
times when I wanted the storyline to move a bit faster, but the drama that took
place among the characters was catching and I found myself wanting to read
faster to find out what was going to happen. I didn’t have any sisters growing
up, but I can just imagine the ups and downs, the jealousy, and the connections
that this family had. I related to the fact that the Andreas family escaped
into reading whenever life became too hard and thought it was hilarious how the
father always spoke through quoting a Shakespearean play when trying to give
his daughters advice. The family dynamic is very rich and brilliant. I ended up
borrowing the book from the library, but I wish I had bought it because I think
that it would be a good book to have for friends that might need a good feeling
read that they can relate to when life gets rough.