Afbeelding van de auteur.

Cathy Lamb

Auteur van Julia's Chocolates

19+ Werken 2,197 Leden 122 Besprekingen Favoriet van 8 leden

Werken van Cathy Lamb

Julia's Chocolates (2007) 427 exemplaren
The Last Time I Was Me (2008) 273 exemplaren
Henry's Sisters (2009) 266 exemplaren
Such A Pretty Face (2010) 239 exemplaren
Holiday Magic (2010) 153 exemplaren
First day of the Rest of My Life (2011) 148 exemplaren
A Different Kind of Normal (2012) 117 exemplaren
Beach Season (Anthology 4-in-1) (2012) 115 exemplaren
If You Could See What I See (2012) 87 exemplaren
What I Remember Most (2014) 79 exemplaren
My Very Best Friend (2015) 70 exemplaren
No Place I'd Rather Be (2017) 69 exemplaren
The Man She Married (2018) 54 exemplaren
The Language of Sisters (2016) 52 exemplaren
All About Evie (2019) 34 exemplaren

Gerelateerde werken

Comfort and Joy [Anthology 4-in-1] (2007) — Medewerker — 189 exemplaren
Our First Christmas [Anthology 4-in-1] (2014) — Medewerker — 90 exemplaren

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Can I please give this book an extra star? You know how rare it is to read something that hits a home run. This book is one of those times for me, and I cannot sing enough praise for Cathy Lamb and Henry's Sisters. I cried, real tears down my cheeks, not just moisture collecting in the corners while reading this. I laughed out loud, not a huck or a chuckle, but a belly-jiggling laugh. And I smiled - wow, I smiled a lot while reading this book.

Henry is a special needs person and the youngest of the Bommarito children. The sisters are Isabelle, whose voice we hear, a famous photographer and professional one-night stander; Cecilia, Iz's twin who is wholly angry, mean, has an over-eating problem, is a superb kindergarten teacher, and is in the middle of a divorce; and Janie, an OCD best-selling crime novelist who invents twisted ways to kill her characters while she herself cannot leave her houseboat from fear of the world, and the people in it.

The cast is rounded out by River, the stripper mom, Amelia Earhart (grandma has dementia), and Carl, the long-lost Dad who shows up thirty years later. The family is ripe for disaster, with sharp wit and lots of heartaches as they navigate who they are and how they came to be. Cecilia's daughters add more color and drama as if either is missing from the plot.

When Momma needs surgery, the girls come together to take care of the family and revisit their past to move forward with their lives. The dialogue is raw and painful, authentic to any dysfunctional family. The characters scream at each other, call all the right names to hit every sore spot that only family knows, and are loyal to a fault when push comes to shove. While the girls grapple with how awful their upbringing was, and it was horrible, mind-blowing, jaw-dropping, yet, so real and believable, Henry thrives being a dog walker for the shelter, helper at Wednesday and Sunday mass with Father Mike, Bunko set up master for the senior citizens, and sample giver at his family's bakery. Henry knows everyone, the goofy teenagers at church, the scary "knife-face" man in the leather vest, the mayor, the dogs at the shelter, the kids on the corner. And to all, he throws out a heartfelt, "Jesus loves you."

When Henry takes ill, the family learns what family means - and this is when your reader's heart will break.

I am officially listing this book, Henry's Sisters, as one of my all-time favorite reads.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
LyndaWolters1 | 8 andere besprekingen | Apr 3, 2024 |
This is the story of sisters Madeline and Annie who were abused as children by a stepfather and his friends. They are now adults with successful careers but still carrying emotional and psychological scars. The anniversary of the abuse trials is approaching, and a reporter is planning to write and story. In addition, the sisters are being blackmailed by someone who has pornographic photos of them. And their grandparents, who raised them, seem to be keeping major secrets of their own. The sisters are struggling to figure out what's going on, and how to regain control of their lives.

This book was a strange mixture of laugh-out-loud, almost slapstick, funny at times. And so very tragic at others. The humour didn't always work, such as the prosecuting attorney's reaction to the girls' mother at her trial. It was just juvenile.

The characters were pretty well developed, although the plot kept hinting at things without resolution a bit too long for me. I found some aspects too fairy-tale like: Steven's unending love for Madeline; the reunion with their uncle and his family for example. And, the book includes a rant against child pornography, which is not in tune with the character's voice and seems like the author's personal view. That's not okay.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
LynnB | 6 andere besprekingen | Mar 21, 2024 |
I read this book a few years ago and realize I never reviewed it! Although it has been a while since I read it, the story was funny, heartwarming, and sad... as Cathy's novels usually are.

She somehow knows how to make us laugh, even when the story is sad. And the importance of family always resonates in her stories, reminding us what is really important in life.
 
Gemarkeerd
JillHannah | 6 andere besprekingen | Nov 20, 2023 |
I dislike plots that are thin and rely on cutsie details to try to appeal to the reader. How did Natalie have so many clothes when she was in rehab? Plus, it could have used a proofreader or editor. Allusion when it should have been illusion? I’m sorry I wasted my time.
 
Gemarkeerd
cathy.lemann | 4 andere besprekingen | Mar 21, 2023 |

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Statistieken

Werken
19
Ook door
4
Leden
2,197
Populariteit
#11,677
Waardering
3.9
Besprekingen
122
ISBNs
124
Talen
2
Favoriet
8

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