At the point when her 22-year-old stepdaughter declares her commitment to her pandemic sweetheart, Sarah Danhauser is stunned. Yet, the wheels are moving.
Resolved Ruby has previously marked the calendar (only three months away!) and addressed her darling safta, Sarah's mom Veronica, about having the wedding at the family's ocean side house in Cape Cod.
Sarah may be stressed, however Veronica is excited to unite the family one final time prior to putting the enormous house available.
Be that as it may, the way to a big day as a rule accompanies a couple of knocks.
Ruby has consistently known precisely exact thing she needs, however as the wedding date draws near, she ends up wrestling with the injuries left by the mother who left when she was a child.
Veronica winds up confronting unforeseen news, because of her intruding sister, and should return to her decisions quite a while in the past, when she was a top of the line writer with an alternate life.
Sarah's twin sibling, Sam, is recuperating from a horrendous misfortune, and standing up to central issues about what his identity is — questions he desires to determine during his visit on the Cape.
Sarah's better half, Eli, who's been mysteriously far off during the pandemic, faces the outcomes of a quite a while in the past slip by from his normal hero conduct.
Furthermore, Sarah, disappointed by her significant other, worried about her stepdaughter, and exhausted by difficulties of life during isolation, faces the charming return of somebody from quite a while ago and a daily existence that might have been.
While the big day shows up, sweethearts are uncovered as their actual selves, errors take on a unique kind of energy, and privileged insights become exposed.
There are conflicts and disclosures that will contact every individual from the more distant family, guaranteeing that nothing will at any point be something very similar.
From "the undisputed supervisor of the ocean side read" (The New York Times), The Summer Place is a demonstration of family in the entirety of its muddled magnificence; a tale about what we penance and how we excuse.
Enchanting, clever, huge hearted, and pointedly noticed, this is Jennifer Weiner's adoration letter to the Outer Cape and the influence of home, how our lives are enhanced by individuals we call family, and the vast ways love can shock us.
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