Out of the Clear Blue Sky
Books | Fiction / Family Life / General
4.5
(61)
Kristan Higgins
From New York Times bestselling author Kristan Higgins comes a funny and surprising new novel about losing it all—and getting back more than you ever expected. Lillie Silva knew life as an empty nester would be hard after her only child left for college, but when her husband abruptly dumps her for another woman just as her son leaves, her world comes crashing down. Besides the fact that this announcement is a complete surprise (to say the least), what shocks Lillie most is that she isn’t heartbroken. She’s furious. Lillie has loved her life on Cape Cod, but as a mother, wife, and nurse-midwife, she’s used to caring for other people . . . not taking care of herself. Now, alone for the first time in her life, she finds herself going a little rogue. Is it over the top to crash her ex-husband’s wedding dressed like the angel of death? Sure! Should she release a skunk into his perfect new home? Probably not! But it beats staying home and moping. She finds an unexpected ally in her glamorous sister, with whom she’s had a tense relationship all these years. And an unexpected babysitter in, of all people, Ben Hallowell, the driver in a car accident that nearly killed Lillie twenty years ago. And then there’s Ophelia, her ex-husband’s oddly lost niece, who could really use a friend. It’s the end of Lillie’s life as she knew it. But sometimes the perfect next chapter surprises you . . . out of the clear blue sky.
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More Details:
Author
Kristan Higgins
Pages
496
Publisher
Penguin
Published Date
2022-06-07
ISBN
0593335341 9780593335345
Community ReviewsSee all
"4.5 ⭐️❤️"
C W
Carly White
"I love Kristan Higgins! I can always fall into her stories and wrap myself up in her characters. There's just something about the way she writes... Just what I did with this novel. At first I thought it was going to be either a little cheesy, or silly, or over the top. But my thinking that the characters were more like caricatures of people turned out to be wrong. By the end, it fills itself out."
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Elizabeth Fordham