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   Book Info

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Dance with Me  
Author: Luanne Rice
ISBN: 0553586920
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

From Publishers Weekly
Heartbreak gives way to love and reconciliation in this poignant tale by veteran romance writer Rice (The Perfect Summer, etc.). After more than a decade as the owner of a trendy New York City bakery, Calamity Jane's, 35-year-old Jane Porter returns to her native rural Rhode Island to help her sister, Sylvie, care for their ailing mother, Margaret. Neighbor Dylan Chadwick has recently moved back to the Twin Rivers area, too, after abandoning his career as a federal law enforcement agent in New York. Both Jane and Dylan are badly scarred by life's blows: Dylan is still mourning the death of his wife and daughter in a shootout, and Jane can't forget the outcome of a doomed college romance. As Dylan embarks on the daunting task of restoring his father's beloved apple orchard, Jane takes an avid interest in Dylan's 15-year-old niece, Chloe, baking apple tarts for the orchard roadside stand where Chloe works. Sparks fly between Dylan and Jane, but the novel's plot hinges on Jane and Chloe's growing friendship. Rice relies heavily on coincidence and contrivance, concocting a tear-jerking mix of family strife, juvenile impetuosity and misunderstood motives, but her sympathetic protagonists keep readers engaged. Even secondary characters like Sylvie, a tightly wound school librarian, and Mona, Chloe's eccentric best friend, make an impression, and readers will breathe sighs of relief when the long-awaited happy ending comes for Dylan, Jane and Chloe. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From AudioFile
Master baker Jane Porter visits her home in Twin Rivers, Rhode Island, to help her sister, who lives with their ailing mother, and to see how her daughter, Chloe, has grown under the love of her adopted parents. Dylan Chadwick, Chloe's uncle, owns the family apple orchard and is trying to return it to life as he repairs his emotional health after the death of his wife and daughter. When Jane begins to bake pies for Dylan's farm stand, managed by Chloe, sparks begin to fly. Karen Ziemba breathes life into all the characters so ably created by Rice. Ziemba's soft cadence adds romance and understanding to these tangled lives and the love that struggles to blossom in the orchard. M.B.K. © AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine

From Booklist
Jane Porter is traveling back to her hometown of Twin Rivers, Rhode Island, with a heavy heart. She has stayed away as much as possible for the last 15 years, while her sister, Sylvie, has remained in town and taken care of their ill mother. The girls' mother was once a proud school principal who raised her brilliant daughters alone after her husband deserted them and then, because of her pride and fear of abandonment, convinced young Jane to give her newborn child up for adoption when the father wanted nothing to do with them. Jane has always regretted that decision and now wants to see her daughter. The opportunity arises when she meets her daughter's uncle, Dylan, who has lost his wife and daughter. Dylan and Jane both have an aura of tragedy about them. He and Jane become involved, and through him she develops a relationship with her daughter, Chloe, without revealing the fact that she is Chloe's birth mother. Once again, Rice captures the wonder of life, warts and all, and puts in a bid for hope. Her latest is a stellar example of why Rice continues to gain popularity. Patty Engelmann
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review
"Poignant…. Sympathetic protagonists keep readers engaged."
--Publishers Weekly


From the Hardcover edition.

Review
"Poignant?. Sympathetic protagonists keep readers engaged."
--Publishers Weekly




Dance with Me

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Dance with Me resonates with the magic and mystery of human relationships...and the real beauty of the human heart.

Jane Porter has always been a free spirit, as wild and beautiful as the vast acres of apple orchards in rural Twin Rivers, Rhode Island -- the town forever etched upon her heart. Now, fourteen years after she left it behind, Jane is unexpectedly drawn home to her mother and only sister. Dylan Chadwick has come back too, shedding the steely exterior he wore as a federal agent in order to follow in the footsteps of his apple-farming father and escape the memories of the life he once lived.

Amid this landscape of loss and renewal, of families struggling to find their way back together with an innocent young girl as their lodestone, a haunting story about small-town secrets unfolds. Dance with Me explores emotional connections at their very core, with acute insights into the ties between mothers and daughters, sisters and lovers that will resonate for a long time to come.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

Heartbreak gives way to love and reconciliation in this poignant tale by veteran romance writer Rice (The Perfect Summer, etc.). After more than a decade as the owner of a trendy New York City bakery, Calamity Jane's, 35-year-old Jane Porter returns to her native rural Rhode Island to help her sister, Sylvie, care for their ailing mother, Margaret. Neighbor Dylan Chadwick has recently moved back to the Twin Rivers area, too, after abandoning his career as a federal law enforcement agent in New York. Both Jane and Dylan are badly scarred by life's blows: Dylan is still mourning the death of his wife and daughter in a shootout, and Jane can't forget the outcome of a doomed college romance. As Dylan embarks on the daunting task of restoring his father's beloved apple orchard, Jane takes an avid interest in Dylan's 15-year-old niece, Chloe, baking apple tarts for the orchard roadside stand where Chloe works. Sparks fly between Dylan and Jane, but the novel's plot hinges on Jane and Chloe's growing friendship. Rice relies heavily on coincidence and contrivance, concocting a tear-jerking mix of family strife, juvenile impetuosity and misunderstood motives, but her sympathetic protagonists keep readers engaged. Even secondary characters like Sylvie, a tightly wound school librarian, and Mona, Chloe's eccentric best friend, make an impression, and readers will breathe sighs of relief when the long-awaited happy ending comes for Dylan, Jane and Chloe. (Feb. 17) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Happy-go-lucky Jane Porter returns to the rural Rhode Island town she once fled and takes up with Dylan Chadwick, another lost sheep back in the fold. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

AudioFile

Master baker Jane Porter visits her home in Twin Rivers, Rhode Island, to help her sister, who lives with their ailing mother, and to see how her daughter, Chloe, has grown under the love of her adopted parents. Dylan Chadwick, Chloe's uncle, owns the family apple orchard and is trying to return it to life as he repairs his emotional health after the death of his wife and daughter. When Jane begins to bake pies for Dylan's farm stand, managed by Chloe, sparks begin to fly. Karen Ziemba breathes life into all the characters so ably created by Rice. Ziemba's soft cadence adds romance and understanding to these tangled lives and the love that struggles to blossom in the orchard. M.B.K. © AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

You can go home again. As Margaret Porter drifts into happy senility, Sylvie, her dutiful daughter (a school librarian), takes over her care. Jane, her wayward daughter (a baker of upscale goodies), comes back from New York to the family's rural Rhode Island home, carrying a gooey, sugary cake for her diabetic mother's birthday. Sylvie scolds and Jane feels as if she can't do anything right. And she still feels guilty over the secret that their mother has seemingly forgotten. The years are slipping by faster and faster, but Twin Rivers hasn't changed all that much-has she? Jane doesn't really know. Driving down a rural road, she spies a ruggedly attractive man working in the old orchard that belongs to the Chadwicks, the adoptive parents of Chloe, a headstrong but charming teenager, warmly and believably drawn by author Rice (The Perfect Summer, 2001), etc.). Chloe champions vegan beliefs and is generally given to eccentric behavior that distresses her straight-arrow parents. But shy Jane befriends the girl and wastes no time falling in love with Dylan Chadwick, the man she saw in the orchard. He's a retired US Marshal from New York whose estranged wife and beloved daughter died in a shooting. Chloe is close to him-and has no idea that Jane is her birth mother, or that Jane was pressured into giving her up by Margaret, who'd raised her own two daughters by herself when their good-for-nothing father skipped out. An imperfect but much deserved happy ending awaits all. Thankfully, Rice keeps it real this time and skips the contrivances-child angels, blind heroes, overwrought suspense-that plagued her recent outings. A return to what the author does best: heartfelt family drama, gracefullywritten and poignant. Agency: Jane Rotrosen Agency

     



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