BY: ANJI NOLAN

Raising teenagers is hard enough. But when a single dad has to deal with a bi-polar daughter, it can be a recipe for disaster. Fortunately, the cosmos has a way of evening things out, and introduces a lonely young widow into their lives. Set in rural Maine, Lonely Hearts Cry is the parallel love story of one such father and his headstrong daughter.

 

TAYLOR JONES SAYS: In Lonely Hearts Cry by Anji Nolan, we are treated to two love stories. Jingle writer Jo Weston is recently widowed and wants to move to rural Maine. But the house she wants to buy belongs to an eccentric widower who has a bi-polar daughter and very firm ideas on who should be living in the house that he is selling. Once Jo makes it through the interview and actually buys the house, she has to acclimate to being away from everything she has ever known as well as the difference between city and country life. Her first night there, she freaks. It’s too quiet. As the seller, Mark Newcombe, understands what the new widow is going through, he takes her under his wing, and soon a budding romance blossoms. But Mark’s bi-polar daughter, Dani, is a handful, and at eighteen, very hard to control. Mark frets constantly about her, whether she has taken her medicine, and whether he is doing everything he should as a single father. Dani, however, is also in a romantic relationship with her childhood sweetheart, Nick Brewster, but that relationship is also challenged as Dani’s bi-polar disorder makes everyone’s life difficult.

Giving us a glimpse or what it is like to both be bi-polar and to have someone you love who is, Nolan treats these subjects with sensitivity and compassion, crafting a moving and heartwarming tale of love, loss, and starting over. An excellent read.

REGAN MURPHY SAYS: Lonely Hearts Cry by Anji Nolan is the story of a young widow whose life is in a downward spiral. Jo Weston has lost her husband recently and the spark she once had for both life and her work as a jingle writer for an advertising agency. Determined to pull herself out of the funk and get her life back on track, Jo moves to rural Maine, where she meets long-time widower Mark Newcombe. An old hand at the grieving game, Mark helps to draw Jo back into the light, but their romance is fraught with problems. Mark’s daughter, Dani, who is bi-polar, has her own share of problems. Her boyfriend, Nick, plans to be a doctor, and Dani wants to be a vet. Dani, who is now eighteen, is striking out on her own, and Mark finds it difficult to relax and let go, especially when Dani cannot really be trusted to take her medicine like she should.

Told with compassion and skill, Lonely Hearts Cry is both a romance and a story of overcoming loss and starting over, when moving on seems to be the most difficult thing to do. I think it’s a book everyone should read.