As it says in the front inside cover “He was a man who didn’t deserve a second chance. But he needed one …” Yes, this is a book about second chances, in this case through reincarnation as a dog. Before you decide not to go any further the book does a good job of handling the subject of being given a second chance to do the right thing while throwing in a little romance (which would be expected from the author of The Devil in the Junior League and The Ex-Debutante besides other romance novels).
While there are many characters floating in and out of the book there are really only two main characters. The first one we meet is attractive, rich, charming but also shallow Sandy Portman who works in his father’s NYC law firm. He is from the very old and wealthy Vandermeer Regal Portman family which his mother, Althea Portman, will not let anyone forget. The other main character is 32-year old Emily, the first of two daughters of Lillian Barlow who was a long-ago renowned women’s militant. Sandy and Emily met five years ago and married against his mother’s objections. They moved into the old, large, expensive Portman-owned Dakota apartment (think John Lennon, Judy Garland, Leonard Bernstein, etc.). The first two years went well but then Sandy began to get “bored” with his marriage (as he did of many things) and he had a number of affairs.
We start the story with Sandy traveling in a snow storm to the Upper West Side Animal Clinic to meet Emily (a volunteer at the Clinic), take her to dinner and tell her he wants a divorce after four years of marriage. Getting out of the car he is killed by a sliding taxi that had swerved to miss a small ugly white dog. An old man/angel appears to guide a denying Sandy who just can’t accept all that is happening. Sandy gets the old man to agree to give him a second chance– and the next moment Sandy wakes up as an old small ugly white dog at the Animal Clinic recovering from terrible injuries. And it is Emily, still trying to adjust to her husband’s death, who comes to the dog’s rescue by paying for his medical bills and in the end adopting him and calling him Einstein.
There are several storylines that are entwined throughout the book. First is Emily trying desperately to hold onto the apartment that Althea Portman wants to take back (Sandy, of course, never did what he promised which was to put Emily on the deed). Another storyline involves Emily’s job at Caldecote Press as a senior editor. A book that Emily has been shepherding and believes will be well received (Ruth’s Intention) is “stolen” by Victoria Wentworth, another senior editor at Caldecote. And Tatiana Harriman, the new President of Caldecote Press, feels Emily isn’t stepping up to her job. The third storyline involves Emily’s 23-year old sister, Jordan. A carefree and “wild” Jordan has suddenly shown up on Emily’s doorstep proposing to write a book about their mother that would be titled “My Mother’s Daughter”. Of course this news has Emily trying to understand who their mother really was and how it affected them as they grew up. The last storyline has handsome, smart Max Reager, a 27-year old ex-Navy Seal living in his family’s Dakota apartment, becoming a possible romantic interest.
The chapters alternate between Sandy/Einstein and Emily as he reluctantly tries to assist Emily in saving the apartment, controlling Jordan and keeping her job. Emily’s chapters start with a quote from My Mother’s Daughter. Is this so we get to know Emily through her mother? While many of the characters are stock (Victoria and Althea are as evil as possible, Max is as perfect as possible, Jordan is as irresponsible as possible) the character of Sandy/Einstein comes across as more memorable – swaying between his normal shallowness while blaming everyone but himself for everything that happens, to truly wanting to help Emily save herself. As for Emily there are times she comes across as a bit too idealistic or naïve.
While many of the endings of the storylines become obvious to the reader long before the endings actually happen there are some wonderful surprises, and I do have to say even one storyline ending that I began to hope would not happen …