This is a pleasant enough story, obviously one in a series, but reads ok as a stand alone. This is the second book, but it gives a recap of And picks right up where the first one.leaves off.
When Melinda's engagement ends, her cat dies, and she loses her job, she finds herself back in her Iowa hometown of Prosper, at the age of 40. Rather than staying with her parents, she rents a farm from Horace, who has gone to a.nursing home, and gets a reduced rent in exchange for caring for his dog, chickens, sheep, and two barn cats.
This is a simple story, as she adjusts to country life. Most of the.novel is just about her daily life and that of the townsfolk. As the summer comes to an end, Horace plans to come.home, and Melinda needs to decide whether to find a new job and return to her old life in Minneapolis, or to stay in Prosper somehow.
This isn't a memorable book, but it's rather sweet, somewhat on the order of the "Mitford" series, but with fewer events and less engaging characters. It's a pleasant enough read, though I don't understand why it got such high reader ratings.