Middle aged, high-powered Manhattan attorney, Roseanna Chaldecott, discovers what’s really important in life.
Roseanna’s best friend, and law partner, Alice, suddenly dies of a stroke.
Filled with grief, anger, despair, and other difficult emotions to label, Roseanna takes off driving towards upstate New York. She runs out of gas in the middle of nowhere. Country quietness surrounds her....much different than Manhattan.
She sees a shabby looking farm house for sale - barn included - on twenty seven acres - and just like that - ends up buying it.
We’ll meet a mother and her little girl squatting - and other squatters- on the property, a dog, a horse, and Roseanna’s estranged adult son, Lance.
The storytelling is seamless with strong character development. The dialogue was a standout ....humorous, sarcastic, with no bullshit straightforward discourse.
With Mother’s Day this month....it’s only normal for many of us to ‘at least’ think about our mother’s. This book is a great choice for anyone who enjoys a comfort-easy-page turning ‘real life’ type story.
It’s ‘especially’ valuable for those who aren’t feeling at peace with their own ‘parent/adult’ child relationship. (I’m dealing with this issue these days).
Catherine Ryan Hyde examines numerous themes in “Heaven Adjacent”, including taking stock in one’s life, re-evaluating choices, wealthy vs. thrifty vs. greedy vs. satisfied values, future aspirations, patience, acceptance, tolerance, forgiveness, and a very authentic look at the ‘parent/ adult’ child relationship.
Rosanna and her son, Lance - had years of fraught suffering due to unresolved conflicts between them.
Lance and Rosanna come face to face together.....and slowly we witness Lance’s anger toward his mother soften — disarming our own hearts alongside of them both.
It’s clear this book teaches (subtly), the power of healing ....( I’m not there myself yet- but I’m reminded - once again - that well being is in my own hands.
Martin Luther King once said, “we only have two choices: to live together as brothers or perish together as fools”. It is inevitably in our higher self interest to pull ourselves together, if we don’t want to be pulled apart..... (applying to the parent/adult child relationship as well).
There is no growth without growing pains— and the labor pains of giving birth to a new world and a new way of being can be the most painful yet rewarding of all—
Beautiful storytelling with pearls of wisdom!