A fatal accident, domestic assault, and a teenager threatening to harm himself was enough fun for one day, so when Ben Anderson came upon a speeding truck at 2:00 a.m., he wasn't in the most patient of moods. It had already been a long arduous day.
The last thing Aubrey Devlin, a pediatric nurse at a children’s hospital, needed to end her day was the sight of pretty blue lights from a Maine State Trooper’s car flashing vibrantly in the rear view mirror. After losing a patient she’d grown close to at work mere hours earlier, she was emotional and on edge. And Trooper Anderson’s shining personality was salt on the wound.
After a not so pleasant exchange on both sides, Aubrey was left with $500 in traffic tickets and Ben was left with a foul mood.
Following their rocky initial introduction, their paths would become painfully intertwined by a young girl named Tiffany “Tiffy” Anderson, Ben’s niece and a newly diagnosed cancer patient. And the path Tiffy would lead them down would be an eye opening one.
Born and raised in Maine's North Woods, Monahan spent the greater portion of her life writing fiction as a hobby, but did not embark on publishing her work until 2013. Monahan has since published three novels and five novellas, ranging in topic from mystery, to drama, to romance. She currently spends her time divided between working full-time as an Emergency Communications Officer and writing.
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This story was just okay. There were too many issues just skimmed and then forgotten about. Also the flow of the book was too choppy for me. I don’t think it was a horrible story, but it had the opportunity to be unforgettable and it wasn’t.
This story had the potential to be extraordinary; however it fell short. Entirely too much telling and not enough showing. The characters felt flat. There wasn’t a smooth flow to the storyline. I never really liked Aubrey or Ben, but Tiffy stole the show for me. I skimmed about one-third of the book in different places, but I have to say the letter Tiffy wrote made me bawl. Just an average book.