Raising Hope by Katie Willard, set in a small New Hampshire town, peeks in on the 12th summer of a girl named...you guessed it...Hope. She's not just any 12 year old girl though. Her mother died in childbirth, and her grief stricken father (Bobbie) couldn't cope with both his emotions and a newborn, so he signed over guardianship rights to his sister Ruth and his ex-girlfriend Sarah Lynn. The problem is, Ruth and Bobbie grew up in a poor home. Their single mother cleaned houses for a living...one of them being Sarah Lynn's mother's mansion of a house. Her father is one of the most hot-shot lawyer's in town after all. So the two guardians of newborn Hope grew up resenting/looking down on each other, live in two completely different worlds, and have nothing in common. Sounds like a realistic and viable home for raising a child right?
Each chapter is told from one of four viewpoints: Ruth, Sarah Lynn, her mother (Maimee), and Hope. Willard does a decent job giving each narrator a unique voice, the dialogue is above average, and the storyline moves along at a brisk pace. Like typical women's romance genre fiction though, much of the conflict/tension feels contrived. I wanted to shake each of the main characters, look them in the eye, and say "Really?" There are some words of wisdom buried in the cookie cutter blah blah blah that elevate the book above 1 star tripe though. I'll end the review with a few examples.
Sarah Lynn realizing that she's a fool for not following her heart: "He bounded down the steps and pulled me close, and I realized that what Ruth had said was the truth: When someone makes you feel alive, you walk toward him, not away."
Ruth realizing that she isn't an outcast in her town after all: "Chet's standing in the doorway to the kitchen, shaking his head and beaming with joy. He starts it--puts his hands together and claps--and then everyone else gets on their feet and joins in. They're all clapping and cheering for me, and I swear, I feel like that idiot Sally Field getting her Oscar. you like me, I want to tell them; you really like me."
Hope getting a lesson in gardening that parallels growing up: "'We don't want the roots to keep growing in a circle when we put it in the ground; we want the roots to spread out so they can take in the nutrients and water the plant needs. We want the roots to expand.' I move my fingers apart to show her what I mean. 'So you need to tease those roots on the bottom, to separate them and spread them out.' She begins to pick at them, then says, 'Uh-oh. I broke some.' 'That's okay. That happens. The plant will thank you for it, because it'll really thrive when ti's in the ground. You're setting it up to establish itself well.'"
Bottom line: If you're looking for a feel good novel, with a decent helping of romance, good dialogue, and a nicely packaged ending tied up neatly with a bow then this might just be the book for you. If unrealistic plots annoy you, characters with petty problems blown out of proportion frustrate you, and contrived angst makes you shutter then look elsewhere. Given 2.5 stars or Above Average.