…but with a cat the kids left behind as her only companion, a divorced woman is blindsided and overwhelmed by empty nest syndrome.
That is why escaping from her cramped, messy apartment in the city sounds like a welcome change.
But can moving to the family cottage with her middle-aged sisters really be a good idea?
As she battles encroaching woodland creatures and noisy vacationers, her resilience wobbles. Can she grapple with the ghosts of her messed-up past? Will she drown in a sea of old relationships? Can she find tranquility in this season of turbulence?
This fearless portrayal of life beyond the empty nest will make you laugh in recognition. Poignant and mesmerizing prose, for lovers of short fiction for women, An Empty Nest: A Summer of Stories is an ideal read for a summer’s afternoon.
Would you like to be transported to a summery lakeside cottage? Then click buy now and start reading today.
The book is available for FREE as a digital download on SandyDay.ca
Sandy Day is a recovering chatterbox and writer of riveting poetry, memoir, and fiction. She has authored six books to date, with two in the works. A lover of cheese, coffee shops, and illustrations, she lives on the shore of lovely Lake Simcoe in Georgina, Ontario, Canada. You can find and follow her on sandyday.ca - it rhymes! She also hangs out on Substack.
An Empty Nest is a series of short snapshots that all link to several months in the narrator's life.
Suffering from the empty nest syndrome, the main character plans to make a move from a city apartment to a lakeside cottage. Her life is reversing; with her children and husband gone, she plans to spend the summer sharing a cottage with her sisters, then finally moving to be with her mother. Throughout the stories there is a process of shedding the past and embracing the future. As you join the narrator on her journey there is definitely a sense of metamorphosis at a poignant time in her life.
An Empty Nest is the second novel that I have been honored to review by author Sandy Day. This piece is like a series of sketches put together by an author to represent one complete picture. you are served snapshots from the protagonist’s life whether it is of memories from her past as a child to glimpses of what the second half of her life looks like.
Her children have moved out and on with their lives as has her ex-husband. The children, namely her eldest daughter, saffron, worry about her and try to fill the void with pets they promise to assist caring for but continuously fail at. Her sisters are checkered throughout her story as they and her parents undoubtedly influenced her life and though the sisters are different they all join together in the end for their next stage residing in a cottage near their mother.
There is a theme of both letting go and acceptance in this novel though every micro chapter is so subtle in nature. Day has a way with words, with creating a tone and picture, that carries such potency and depth in what others would see as mundane. I felt more than a connection to this character. I felt like we were one and the same. This could be me and it didn’t feel cautionary. just a very real future that we all inevitably, in some capacity, will have to face.
An Empty Nest is a cohesive collection of snapshots that humbles and gets you to reflect on your OWN life-where it has been and where it is going. we are all composed Of a million tiny pieces. Those pieces all together make us whole.
“Why is it easier to remember the meanness of my childhood than the blandness?”
A woman in her mid-50s is facing a life alone. Newly divorced with children living with their father, she has an empty nest and in the quiet, her mind fills with thoughts. She lives in an apartment with a cat, but can’t seem to find a way to grasp life fully. She decides to move in with her sisters to a family cottage for the summer and try to find some focus in life.
I have reviewed Sandy Day’s book, Fred’s Funeral, and she contacted me about reading and reviewing her newest book. An Empty Nest is a collection of short essays detailing one woman’s summer during a hard time in her life.
Each short chapter in the book tells part of the woman’s story – either past or current life. She explores why her marriage fell apart, how her sisters interact with each other and how she’s lost touch with her children. The reader can feel her sense of detachment from life. As the book unfolds and the relationships with her sisters become stronger, you can sense her finding her peace.
An Empty Nest is a short, thoughtful read about dealing with loss and finding the strength to find a new way ahead in life. Readers looking for an interesting summer read will enjoy this book.