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Promises to Keep
Promises to Keep
Author: Jane Green
Callie Perry lights up every room she enters, and adores her settled family life in tony Bedford, New York. Steffi is Callie's younger sister. At thirty, she's still a free spirit bouncing between jobs and boyfriends in Manhattan. Their long-divorced parents, Walter and Honor, share little besides their grown daughters. But when Callie receives ...  more »
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ISBN-13: 9780452297173
ISBN-10: 0452297176
Publication Date: 5/31/2011
Pages: 352
Rating:
  • Currently 4.3/5 Stars.
 26

4.3 stars, based on 26 ratings
Publisher: Plume
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review
Read All 4 Book Reviews of "Promises to Keep"

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Cileki avatar reviewed Promises to Keep on
This book will make you laugh, cry, get angry. It's about life, love and family.
reviewed Promises to Keep on + 36 more book reviews
Not sure what book they're describing here, but it is somewhat different from the book I just read!
That being said- this book was fantastic! It started off a little slow and a lot of characters were introduced and I wondered if the pace would pick up. It absolutely did! I was drawn into the lives of these characters and I cared about each of them. Without giving away too much of the plot, I was in tears about 2/3s of the way through and didn't stop crying until the end. Very heart warming and powerful story!
maurak avatar reviewed Promises to Keep on + 16 more book reviews
PROMISES TO KEEP is a beautiful tribute to a dear friend of Jane Green who died too young, and it beautifully captures the conflicted emotions of friends and family who come together to help a friend struggling against a potentially lethal illness. While this is not a long book, Green is surprisingly able to develop eight characters very fully, so I found myself emotionally invested in the futures of many different characters.

Each of the eight main characters I found to be enormously likeable, which ironically was the only discordant note in the book - everyone was almost too decent, too happy, too self-aware, too good to feel entirely true. The only "bad guys" were a cartoonishly unreasonable ex-wife and a hyperbolically selfish soon-to-be-ex-wife, but those were just minor roles. Everyone else was someone I'd want to know, someone I'd love to have as a friend. And despite the great tragedy of a life-threatening illness that runs throughout the book, every character has an enviably happy, fulfilling life.

Having recently lost a sibling to sudden death, I found the suffering and worry of friends and family to be emotionally resonant, and found myself feeling jealous of the ability for loved ones to say a long goodbye. Ultimately, though, this book is about embracing life, and living it fully no matter what is happening, about joy amid sorrow, about how suffering and happiness can intersect. It is definitely worth a read.


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