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The longest ride  Cover Image Book Book

The longest ride

Sparks, Nicholas. (Author).

Summary: Two couples. Two love stories. One epic tale. Ninety-one-year-old Ira Levinson is in trouble. Struggling to stay conscious after a car crash, an image of his adored - and long-dead - wife Ruth appears. Urging him to hang on, she lovingly recounts the joys and sorrows of their life together - how they met, the dark days of WWII and its unrelenting effect on their families. A few miles away, college student Sophia Danko's life is about to change. Recovering from a break-up, she meets the young, rugged Luke and is thrown into a world far removed from her privileged school life. Sophia sees a new and tantalising future for herself, but Luke is keeping a secret that could destroy it all. Ira and Ruth. Sophia and Luke. Two couples, separated by years and experience, whose lives are about to converge in the most unexpected - and shocking - of ways.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781455520640
  • ISBN: 9781455520633 (pbk.) :
  • ISBN: 1455520659
  • ISBN: 9781455520657 (hc.) :
  • Physical Description: xi, 398 pages ; 22 cm.
    print
  • Edition: 1st ed.
  • Publisher: New York, New York : Grand Central Publishing, [2013].
Subject: North Carolina -- Fiction
Married people -- Fiction
Cowboys -- Fiction
College students -- Fiction
Life change events -- Fiction
Man-woman relationships -- Fiction
Unmarried couples -- Fiction
Reminiscing in old age -- Fiction
Traffic accident victims -- Fiction
World War, 1939-1945 -- Fiction
World War 2 -- Fiction
Secrets -- Fiction
Marriage -- Fiction
Male-Female Romance -- Fiction
Husband and wife -- Fiction
Widowers -- Fiction
Older men -- Fiction
Genre: Love stories.

Available copies

  • 41 of 43 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 0 of 0 copies available at Salmo Public Library.

Holds

  • 1 current hold with 43 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
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  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2013 November #2
    Love means never having to say you're dead. Sparks (The Best of Me, 2011, etc.) fans know the drill: sweetness and light, darkness and despair, kissing and making up. And always, always, intertwining storylines. Got the template? Here, Sparks opens with a grim scene that soon turns as sappy as a maple: Old Ira Levinson (there's a signal there) has driven off the road in black ice and snow, and now he's feeling, as he says, "the Grim Reaper tapping my shoulder." Now, it stands to reason that up there in the Southern highlands, a tow truck is likely to arrive less expeditiously than the nearest friendly ghost, in this case, that of Ira's beloved wife, Ruth. If you've seen that Patrick Swayze/Demi Moore movie, you'll know how this part works. But Ira isn't just any old Southern Jew expiring in the cold: He's had a hobby that's morphed into a grail. Exit stage right; enter Sophia and Luke. Sophia's a sorority sweetie with a brawler of a boyfriend whom she's trying to ditch, and Luke is the cowboy hero who comes loping along to save the day. But let Sparks explain: "The cowboy's words were clear and slow, as if he were addressing a dimwit." Indeed. Well, bad boyfriend is conflict No. 1, and Luke's nerves are conflict No. 2, especially when it comes to a session with the monster bull of his darkest dreams. All that remains to be done is to lasso these two couples together, jerk some tears: "My plea to you is this: despite your sadness, do not forget how happy you have made me; do not forget that I loved a man who loved me in return, and this was the greatest gift I could ever have hoped to receive." To which, in cowboy-speak, the proper reply is: "Aw, shucks." Just the sort of thing for Sparks buffs. Copyright Kirkus 2013 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.

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