A good three and a half stars, but maybe not a four. I enjoyed this comfort read set in Salcombe, a harbor town on an estuary in Devon, England. (Google it to see lovely photos of this idyllic spot.) Cara, who has recently lost her husband and sold her home in London without knowing where she wants to resettle, comes to stay with her brother Max. Fortunately her disagreeable sister-in-law Judith is away, so Max and Cara, who have been close since their difficult childhoods, can enjoy each other's company. Cara's grief is still fresh, but she also harbors secrets that have shadowed her entire adult life. Max was also a close friend of Cara's late husband and both had served as officers in the Navy. Max's godson Sam, who was orphaned as a child and raised by his aunt and uncle, also comes to visit. He is about to embark on a naval career as well. Sam and Cara strike up a friendship and he ferries her around the area to house hunt. Cosmo, a young, handsome, and successful Londoner, takes a sabbatical from work to house and dog sit in Salcombe, and is entranced by the natural beauty and the friendliness of the locals. He meets Amy, a young painter/decorator, and they are each charmed by the other, but Cosmo has neglected to mention he's involved with a woman in London.
Cara enjoys the camaraderie of Max's local friends, including Jack, Amy's father, but she is not any closer on deciding whether to settle in Salcombe or not. Sam takes her to visit his large family home, where his aunt and uncle, Fliss and Hal, reside and love to welcome family and visitors. Cara immediately warms to Fliss, who is kind and sympathetic. Hal is another retired naval officer, and they all understand the life in the service often spent abroad.
This is a gentle, romantic story about families and relationships. There is the secret of Cara's past and the questions about her future, as well as some incipient romances, but not a lot of drama. The characters all seem to be closely tuned in to each other in a rather extraordinary way, reading the others' emotions and knowing things are being left unsaid, and so on. They are all very perspicacious! The characters of Fliss and Hal will be familiar to readers of Willett's trilogy about the Chadwick family, which was only published in the U.K. (but which I had special ordered and read). Willett's worldview is rather centered on the officer class of the British Royal Navy, one which she knows personally, and it would be more appealing if her range of characters was a bit broader. The character of Jack, a former teacher but now a house painter along with his daughter Amy, is viewed almost as another class, though he enjoys opera and so perhaps highbrow enough to fit in. The characters, except for Max's wife Judith, do not behave snobbishly, but the inherent prejudices are there because a point is made about Max and Jack being friends. It's those understated British assumptions about class that can be jarring. This is a pleasant read for those who enjoy lovely English settings and a romantic atmosphere in the vein of Rosamunde Pilcher.