More on this book
Community
Kindle Notes & Highlights
Her early thirties quickly faded into a blur of doctors’ appointments, chemo treatments, hope, and despair. When she took a turn for the worst, Andi left her boyfriend—everything in New York—and moved back to Bayshore to care for her mother, and as her sole caretaker, there hadn’t been time for much else. But now . . . Andi had run out of excuses. Not only that, but her mother’s final wish was for her to return to the thing she loved most and turn her dreams into fruition.
young, determined woman, bent on carving her path in the world, to an empty shell of yourself.
“She who knows nothing about what it’s like to be successful, what it’s like to put yourself out there and have your entire life, everything you’ve worked so hard to forget, thrown in your face.”
“You know, often times authors and artists do some of their best work when grieving or in times of hardship.”
“And a world without hope,” she continued, “is depressing. Your books send the message that good exists even with the bad, and that love, no matter how impossible, is possible. If love is such a lie, I can’t see you selling it so easily. You don’t strike me as a liar.”
“Sometimes we lie to ourselves because we’re afraid. A lie is often easier than the truth because the truth is often frightening.”