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| About
The Book |
Book Reviews |
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Lieutenant Sean Forrette strains against mounting G forces as his battered plane screams toward the Iraqi countryside. One word cycles through his mind: Maryn. His fighter jet etches a blazing stripe onto the highway below, then erupts into savage flames. Nine years later, Sean’s fiancée, Maryn, flips through travel magazines. The Seattle teacher decides she’ll take an Australian vacation to finally say goodbye to the airman who never returned from his first combat mission. A biologist named Grant is busy planning his own trip “Down Under”—a vacation he’d planned as a honeymoon several years earlier, before he’d found his new bride in bed with her assistant. Now divorced, he vows never to settle for the wrong woman again. He’s an ordinary man seeking an extraordinary love in a world mostly unfit for such a venture. Grant and Maryn end up in the same tour group. Grant is instantly enchanted by Maryn and finds himself looking more at her than at the stunning scenery outside. As they get to know each other, Grant discovers he’s attracted as much to her wit as to her looks. But occasionally, a melancholy creeps into her eyes. Grant soon learns the purpose of her trip is to say goodbye to Sean. She allows him to read the goodbye letter Sean wrote to her—the kind soldiers write “just in case.” It’s earnest and tender and for a moment, Grant feels sorry for himself. He finally meets an extraordinary woman and she’s still in love with a man she lost nearly a decade earlier. Grant halts his romantic feelings and their friendship blossoms. The more he knows her, the funnier she is—a quick mind and quicker mouth that keeps him intriguingly off balance. For the remainder of the trip through Queensland rainforests and the Great Barrier Reef, Grant makes as much time for Maryn as she wants, but doesn’t push. He spends more time enjoying the Aussie adventure with their other tour mates from eight countries. Months later, the Grant and Maryn reunite in California, but is Maryn’s past truly behind her?
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“Wind to Water” is a deeply absorbing love story. The
first chapter grabs the reader’s attention with an affecting
account of a two-manned military aircraft that is tragically shot
down over Iraq. The ensuing chapters focus on the pilot’s brokenhearted
fiancé, Maryn. Even after nine years, she is still struggling
to say goodbye to the soldier she loved with all her heart. She knows
that it’s time to get on with her life, but in order to do that,
she must first say goodbye to her past. She decides to do that by
way of a vacation to Australia. As part of a group tour, Maryn meets
Grant, a marine biologist from California. The two feel an instant
liking to one another, but neither is sure how to proceed. What follows
is a tender telling of how love can not only break a heart …
but it can mend one as well. Review by Claudia Pemberton, MWSA Reviewer (February
2009) |
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| Copyright 2008 © Dog Ear Publishing | Home | The Book | Author | Excerpt | Contact Us | |
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