It’s 1974. The Osmonds are on the radio. Space hoppers are in every garden. Lou Turner is eight years old and certain that the world is exactly as it should be.
Ashley Richards is at the center of that certainty. Best friend. Constant. The person Lou measures everything else against.
The novel spans thirty years. What begins in childhood—climbing trees, uncomplicated loyalty, the kind of friendship that doesn’t require negotiation—becomes something else entirely as Lou becomes an adult. Adulthood hasn’t delivered what she expected. The trajectory she imagined didn’t materialize. The person she thought she’d be didn’t show up.
Van Munster doesn’t compress the timeline. The thirty years matter. The small decisions compound. The moments Lou missed, the conversations that didn’t happen, the way friendship gets tested by distance and time and the basic fact that people change. All of it accumulates. All of it shapes what Lou and Ashley become to each other.
The title is the thesis. This is a novel about whether the emotional foundation laid in childhood—the friendship, the first love, the clarity children have before learning to qualify everything—survives adulthood. Whether it can withstand everything that comes after. Whether it can still mean something when you reach the other side of thirty years, when both of you have become different people, when the world has asked things of you that childhood never prepared you for.
It’s asking whether what you felt when you were eight years old can still be true when you’re thirty-eight. Whether it should be true. Whether that matters.
Details
| ISBN: 9783955333379 |
| Subtitle: |
| Genre: Romance |
| Subject(s): |
| Publication Date: 2015-01-11 |
| Original Publication Date: |
| Publisher: Ylva Verlag e.Kfr. c/o Astrid Ohletz |
| Language: English |
| Format: Paperback |
| Pages: 336 |
| Rating: |
| Notes: |
| Book_ID: 106016 |