Light of the Moon
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Overview
New York Times bestselling author Luanne Rice transports readers across the sea in this moving, magical tale of a lonely woman with a promise to keep. Set in a landscape of stunning natural beauty, Light of the Moon is a chronicle of mothers and daughters, friendship and family, and an electrifying love that illuminates a path through heartbreak and loss…and will shine in your memory long after the final page.
Spurred by her mother’s dying wish, Susannah Connolly has traveled from her lifelong home on the Connecticut shoreline to the fabled French Camargue, to see its famous white horses and find a mysterious saint linked to her family’s history. An accomplished anthropologist, Susannah has always been confident of her ability to navigate anywhere on the globe. But in the wake of a failed love affair and grieving the loss of her mother, she is adrift and uncertain, seeking only time alone to dig deeply into the personal archaeology of her own life.
American-born Grey Dempsey had come to the Camargue as a journalist, fell in love with a celebrated Romany rider, and suffered a devastating loss of his own. Now he operates a ranch as he struggles to raise his spirited but troubled young daughter who, after a terrible night years ago, fears the horses she once loved.
Within their bittersweet private orbit, in the midst of the endless silvered marshlands, Susannah Connolly will find a part of herself she hadn’t known she had lost. And here she will find herself embraced by a circle of strong and passionate women bound together by their abiding faith in the legendary slave-saint Susannah seeks and in the miracles she is said to still perform for those who believe. Yet old secrets swirl within the fog-shrouded landscape, betrayals that may be beyond the power of any saint, or supplicant, to repair.
Singular, lyrical, Light of the Moon is Luanne Rice at her most spell-binding, as she explores—as only she can—how sometimes to find your way home you must travel far away.
Synopsis
New York Times bestselling author Luanne Rice transports listeners across the sea in this moving, magical tale of a lonely woman with a promise to keep. Spurred by her mother s dying wish, Susannah Connolly has traveled from her lifelong home on the Connecticut shoreline to the fabled French Camargue, to see its famous white horses and find a mysterious saint linked to her family s history. An accomplished anthropologist, Susannah has always been confident of her ability to navigate anywhere on the globe. But in the wake of a failed love affair and grieving the loss of her mother, she is adrift and uncertain.American-born Grey Dempsey had come to the Camargue as a journalist, fell in love with a celebrated Romany rider, and suffered a devastating loss of his own. Now he operates a ranch as he struggles to raise his spirited but troubled young daughter, who now fears the horses she once loved.Within their bittersweet private orbit, Susannah Connolly will find a part of...
Kirkus Reviews
Rice (What Matters Most, 2007, etc.) returns with another novel about family ties, love, hurt and redemption. Susannah Connolly, a successful-on-paper anthropology professor, simultaneously loses her mother to lymphoma and ends a long-failing relationship with a colleague. To fulfill her mother's last wish, Susannah travels to the French Camargue to locate a saint linked to her family. Rice picks a grand setting with the Camargue, but she fails to use the moonlit marshes to create anything more than overwrought suspense. The tale lacks subtlety in its exploration of local gypsy society, and the author fawns tirelessly over mystical white horses. In a rescue scene straight out of a fairy tale, Susannah meets tall, handsome rancher Grey Dempsey. Grey is raising his daughter, Sari, alone-Grey and Sari were abandoned by Sari's mother five years earlier. Despite major personal issues, Grey and Susannah fall instantly (and inexplicably) in love, and from here the novel grows increasingly lackluster. Predictably, Sari and Susannah connect and begin to rediscover themselves. Susannah delves further into her past, ingratiating herself with the vengeful and persecuted female gypsy community, whose most important saint, Sarah, is associated with Susannah's birth. Sari takes one step forward and two steps back, agreeing to ride for the first time since her mother left, then panicking. Ultimately Susannah takes it upon herself to find Sari's mother so the broken family can find closure. The operatics of various scenes (at one point Susannah and Grey go scuba diving for cave art, in another they rescue a horse from quicksand) and the unrealistic dialogue are tiresome. Nothing fresh here. Agent: AndreaCirillo/Jane Rotrosen Agency