The Christmas Escape by Sarah Morgan is a 2021 HQN publication.
Robyn:
Robyn has carved out a solid life in Lapland with husband, but a call from her niece, Christy, opens painful reminders of her past. Christy wants to bring her daughter, Holly, to meet Robyn and spend the holidays in Lapland. Robyn is thrilled, but also very nervous. What would Christy think about Robyn if she knew the truth about her…
Christy:
Christy and Seb married after she learned of her pregnancy. They hadn’t been seeing each other very long, but they were ready to give marriage a try. Now things aren’t going so well. Seb has been ‘working late’, their cottage needs costly repairs, and Christy is second guessing her choice to leave the city.
Alix:
Alix and Christy have been friends forever. Alix was vehemently opposed to Christy’s choice to marry Seb. Seb’s best friend, Zac, was the only thing standing in the way of her stopping the wedding. For five years Alix has been waiting for the other shoe to drop and now it looks like her predictions may be coming true…
With Christy and Seb needing a few days alone, Alix and Zac proceed with the holiday trip to Lapland with Holly. They can’t stand each other, but are determined to do right by Holly…
What could possibly go wrong?
Sarah Morgan is one of my very favorite contemporary fiction writers, these days, but I missed out on her holiday offerings in 2020, so I wanted to be sure to add her latest Christmas book to my list this year.
This is an ambitious story, with three threads, three couples, a child, dogs, and the holidays to navigate, but Morgan manages to make it look easy.
For a while, I was beginning to wonder if Robyn’s thread would ever fully develop, but once she had the floor, I was blown away.
Alix was hysterically funny, but in a poignant and bittersweet way.
Life moves on, and people change and grow, relationships wax and wane and take on new dimensions and the friendship between Christy and Alix showcases the need to accept those changes, but also the importance of communication and empathy. Christy’s role, though, may have been the most important of all, as she is finally able to break the chain of unhealthy family tendencies, to live a more balanced life and set a great example for her children.
At first, I was a bit concerned the drama would outweigh the holiday cheer, which was my chief complaint about last year’s crop of holiday fare, but once again Morgan manages to give me exactly what I wanted- reindeer, snow, hot cocoa, beautiful scenery, an adorable, precocious little girl, long overdue happy ever after’s, and the promise of new holiday traditions to come. What more could I possibly ask for?