This book was fine if a bit too sugary sweet for my liking. Lucia is recently retired and married to Des who was just laid off from his job. They have a mildly autistic son, Issac, who is working in a job that he doesn't really like and have taken in a boarder, Polly, and her baby, Reggie. When Des's cousin, Tommy, sends them money and a box of maps so that they can spend their retirement travelling, Des gets upset and moves out while Lucia embraces the challenge and buys a used motor van. Among the items that Tommy sent was an old compass that only works for special people and helps give them direction on big decisions that they have to make. So Lucia uses it to tell her where she should go on her trip. Issac, Polly and Reggie are joining her and they decide to bring Tommy and his old friend, Peter, along for the ride. All of them have their own issues to work out. Peter has to decide whether or not to let the national trust take over his estate that he can no longer afford to care for, Tommy has to decide if he is going to finally tell Lucia that he loves her, Issac has to decide if he is going to try to market the video game that he is making and if he is going to pursue a relationship with Polly, Polly has to recover from her sister's death and Lucia has to find a way to cope with her failed marriage and guilt over her brother's death when they were children. Along the way they meet nice people and have lovely weather and lean on one another. The biggest twist was that Reggie isn't Polly's son but her nephew and she thinks that Issac is his father since he was friends with her sister at university. But Issac never slept with her sister and is not the reason why she killed herself, but he wants to support Polly and Reggie as if he was his own. Tommy and Lucia end up together after Des admits that he is gay, which really came out of left field, and Peter agrees to let go of his estate if he can still maintain an apartment within it. So everyone ends up happy.