Kellan Publishing Reads discussion
Last Best Thing reading event
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The Last Best Thing reading event
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I hope you're as excited about the prospect of discussing this compelling and controversial book as I am. I welcome any and all comments or feedback, and will do my best to answer any questions you have for me, the author.
Happy reading! ~Kate Sebeny
P.S. Please feel free to post reviews of the book to the publisher's website, http://www.kellanpublishing.com/, my website, www.KateSebeny.com, Amazon or Goodreads. Thank you in advance for your participation.

Kate, your baby, so how would you like to start off the conversation/discussion here?
Do you have any challenges or questions for the readers?
Would you like to discuss characters, plot or something other first?
Yes, I know, I'm throwing it all at you, but this is our maiden voyage so we will ride the waves together :)
Do you have any challenges or questions for the readers?
Would you like to discuss characters, plot or something other first?
Yes, I know, I'm throwing it all at you, but this is our maiden voyage so we will ride the waves together :)

Just wanted to let you know that I will start the book this weekend and add some comments soon after. Looking forward to reading it!

One question I have for readers is this: If you were [pick any character in the book], what would you think or do in response to the dilemmas that arise in the narrative? That is without the benefit of hindsight, based only on the information available to the character at any given point in the story.
While I will be keen to get readers’ impressions of character development, plot, continuity, etc., it’s still too soon to engage in a very meaningful discussion of these topics so early in the reading period. But I’d be very interested to learn your opinions of how the setting and pacing do or don’t contribute to the story, elements readers can get a sense of as they go along.
I’m also curious to know if you consider the story a mystery. And, if so, what is the mystery (aside from “who done it”—and why, how, when and where—information received right up front)?
Most of all, I want to encourage readers to enjoy this book. (I sure wish I could be reading it for the first time along with everyone!) And to please feel free to offer any and all commentary, observations or questions you might have.
Many thanks and happy reading! ~Kate Sebeny
Now that everyone has had about a week to read The Last Best Thing, let's talk about the prologue and opening chapters. How well did it grab your interests?

It really did touch me and has made me contemplate a lot. Actually, while reading, I felt pretty sad sometimes. Having watched my parents grow old, decline, and ultimately not be able to do the things they loved really bummed me out. And I don't look forward to that happening to me. So it was really all about me thinking about me for much of the time! But I guess that's good too!
I realize the question of the day was about the prologue and opening chapters, but I will have to go back and review them in order to have something half-way intelligent to write. But thanks for listening to me wander thus far. :) - Joyce F

The book also made me a bit sad too, Joyce, as my grandparents are suffering from Alzheimer's right now. It's never an easy thing :(
The prologue and opening chapters really grabbed my interest, not least when Sam mentions in the prologue that his wife Sarah killed their good friend Joe! I didn't think it was cold-blooded murder or anything like that, as I knew there had to be a lot of layers to this story, and I was now eager to see what they were. The first chapters also introduced the characters well. I perceived it in a sort of wistful and sad way, because they are all now elderly (save for Libby of course). It's funny because just the other day my Dad, who is 71, mentioned that the older you get the more you look back on your life because there's not much to look forward to in your future, and I thought about that as I was reading because that's kind of the sense I got about the characters here. That also made me want to know more about them, more about how their lives used to be, and what was still to come. That's just my interpretation, though.

That said, do either of you think the inherent humor is any sort of mitigating element? Does it temper the seriousness of the subject matter or somehow highlight it?
Thank you, too, Colin, for the writerly commentary on the story’s presentation.

I also liked the story idea of elderly people who are life-long friends living together and helping each other out rather than living in retirement homes. One thing that Renee picks up on real quick when she visits them is how happy and relaxed they seem. That really stuck with me.


Whether you’re young or old, in a new relationship or a decades-long one, I hope you’ll enjoy reflecting upon the romantic aspects of “The Last Best Thing” as much as I am.
After being married for more than half of my adult life, I’m not currently in a relationship of this sort. But I do know that romantic love can happen at any time. Movies are geared toward new love, fresh romance and the intoxication of discovery. Love is not, however, for the young alone.
Just look at the chapters “Still Pearls” and “Viagra Falls.” While the love interests in these scenes aren’t exactly spring chickens, the developing relationship between Betty and Henry, and the further deepening of the relationship between Sarah and Sam are every bit—if not more—romantic as young love, built as they are on decades of shared experience.
But that’s just my impression. What’s yours?




I'm still on the first chapter, so there's not much I can say yet. I do enjoy the writing itself, it is quite lively and to-the-point, makes it an easy and enjoyable read. Characters thus far seem balanced and well thought-out, although I need to read more to truly make a final statement about that.
I'll go onward for now!
Welcome to the first day of our event. We will be spending the month of February reading and discussing Kellan Publishing Author Kate Sebeny's literary fiction, "The Last Best Thing"
If you haven't done so already, (unless you're a KP author), please pick up your copy to follow along.
https://kellan-publishing.selz.com/it...