Val has been married 46 years, but thanks to her husband's stepping out with another man's wife, there won't be any anniversaries any more. Val moves down the road to a new town, still in Cornwall, buying a cottage with her part of the money from the sale of the house after the divorce. She has her own car, and the main regret she has is that Ray will be with his new woman for their son's wedding, but she will be alone.
As she adjusts to being single, grieving the loss of her marriage, she is also busy making friends and taking on projects. She blossoms into a new person, one who doesn't live in the shadow of her spouse. She admits she took the easy way out when they were together, hanging out with the wives of her now ex-husband's friends, rather than make her own. Now, she has made friends - and has a helper to try and find her a plus-one for her son's wedding...perhaps even a Mr. Right.
Re-entering the dating scene after so long proves daunting, and as her self-confidence grows, she is less interested. in a Plus One for the wedding. There is no Mr. Right, only too many Mr. Maybes.
I enjoyed the book. Loveday was my favorite character, next is her grandson Ollie...but all the characters were interesting. The author portrays the end of Val's marriage and the adjustment period very well. I remember my parents' divorce, although I was just 6 at the time. I remember Mom grieving the marriage and its end. even though she knew it was a bad deal early on. As I got older, and we talked more, it was the idea of marriage, of a loving husband and children, that she grieved most. She did the right thing - the only thing left, really. As did Val...not that a marriage can't survive n infidelity, but for Val, there was the need for her to come out of her shell, to be the person she was meant to be, Val, a strong individual, and not just Ray's wife.