Lost and Found is a departure from my other contemporary novels - The Book of Eve and Becoming Lili. They were both more in-depth, longer (especially Lili), character-led novels, whereas Lost & Found is shorter, punchier and more plot led.
Lost and Found is also a clean romance, as is the whole of the Blackwood Family Saga. Oh, don't get me wrong, there is love and emotion, tenderness and intimacy, but, when it gets down to it, the bedroom door is firmly shut in our faces. I felt it would be refreshing, to have a series that wouldn't offend readers of a more sensitive nature, perhaps the slightly older reader who still enjoys the thrill of the chase, but not so much the actual devouring of the corpse.
Lost and Found is the first in a planned series of seven books about the Blackwood Family. Let me tell you about them, they are a wonderful, eccentric, rambling family. To quote Luke Blackwood, the hero of Lost and Found - "they might be a hotchpotch of exes, steps and halves, but, they're my family, and I love them" - and I love the Blackwoods.
Originally founded by George Blackwood, a legendary fighter of a man, he and his first wife, Celeste, built an empire together and had two children, Monica and Marcus. Eventually drifting apart, George fell immediately into another marriage with Marina, and for a while, it looked as though things were going his way. He and Marina also had two children, Luke and Susannah.
Heartbroken when this marriage also fell apart - Marina stating she loved him to pieces but couldn't bear the pace of his life and of always coming second to the business - the pair remained firm friends, united in their children's lives.
Alone, working too hard, the inevitable happened, and George was hospitalized following a heart attack. Regaining consciousness after surgery, the first thing he saw was the laughing green eyes of his Irish nurse, Siobhan. Two months later, the pair were married and, despite the thirty years age difference between them, were blissfully happy for ten years, during which time Siobhan bore him two children, a son Liam and a daughter Kristina (Kit).
The whole family was devastated though, when George, by then in his late sixties, suffered another heart attack and died, leaving behind three women who had all loved him passionately, six children, and one granddaughter, Megan, the child of his eldest child, Monica. He also left a very substantial fortune to be split evenly between them all, and a multi-millionaire business empire, now very ably managed by his eldest son, Marcus.
So, that's the state of affairs in clan Blackwood at the opening of the book. None of the children are yet married, with the exception of the eldest daughter, Monica, a real estate agent in New York. Marcus is a business tycoon: Luke owns ICRA - the International Child Recovery Agency: Susannah owns and runs a quirky little bookshop: Liam is a war photographer: and Kit is an opera singer. All are happy and settled in their lives, but none of them has really had much luck with love, until now. They are just one happy, tight-knit, loving, rambunctious family.
Arianna, on the other hand, is not as fortunate as clan Blackwood. An only child, both her parents died before her eighteenth birthday. Left alone, she was easy prey for the son of her father's Italian business contact, Roberto Santorini. He married her, and whisked her away to his home in Italy to live with him and his younger sister, Isabella, with whom Arianna quickly became best friends.
When Roberto is offered a senior position in Bank Italia's London branch, Arianna is thrilled to move back home. However, things begin to sour in her marriage when Roberto inherits his parent's fortune. Seeming to change overnight into a violent, manipulative, arrogant bully, Arianna is considering taking their baby, Lucia, and leaving, when the unthinkable happens. Roberto embezzles six million pounds from the bank and flees the country, leaving Arianna penniless, with a young child to support, under suspicion and besmirched with the stain of his actions.
Vowing never to trust a wealthy man again, believing it was the money that changed her husband's character, Arianna is totally alone - apart from the staunch support of Isabella - and has to make a new life for her and her young daughter, Lucia.
Now you know the back story of the characters in Lost and Found. This book is essentially Luke's story, although other members of the clan do appear, they will each have their own story to tell at a later date.
I really hope you love this book as much as I do, and look out for the other six books in the series which will be coming soon. As usual, I am grateful for each and every review I receive.