Thursday, May 8, 2008

Sundays at Tiffany's by James Patterson and Gabrielle Charbonnet


Patterson co-writes this book with Charbonnet as he returns to writing a new romance novel. In an interview, Patterson described this book as a "fairy-tale for grown-ups." I was somewhat skeptical of the premise, basically a woman falls in love with her imaginary friend, and wondered how in the world he could even write such a book.

The plot begins as young Jane is having dessert with her imaginary friend, Michael in a New York hotel. Jane's mother, a highly successful Broadway producer, is very strict while Jane's father is essentially non-existent. Michael is her very best friend. On Jane's ninth birthday, Michael must leave Jane as that is just what he must do. He tells Jane that she will eventually forget him as all the children he's worked with eventually do but, Jane never does. Next, we find Jane all grown-up, working for her mother, and fresh from having huge success with a stage play based on her childhood relationship with Michael. At the same time, Michael arrives in New York for vacation before he receives his next assignment. By chance, the two find each other again but can they ever really be together?

The entire story is so far-fetched, sappy, and definitely a "fairy-tale" but I actually really enjoyed reading this one. I think it is simply because of the fast pace in which Patterson writes that makes me want to keep turning the pages. I just have to see what happens next. Good read and possibly a good beach read for the summer.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Sounds kind of cute. I might check that out, I've yet to venture into Patterson's collection.

Airam said...

This does sound like a pretty wild read ... I may just have to pick it up this summer.

Thanks!

Chris said...

I love Patterson, especially becuase of how easy his books are to read. I haven't made it to anyof those sappyish ones yet but I will.

Dizzie said...

Aw, I loved that book...!