Friendships that go on for years can sustain a person, and when there is a break in the regular get-togethers and an absence of contact, feelings are hurt. People feel abandoned.
Emma Michaels grew up among Hollywood royalty, and was a child actor. She famously divorced her parents at a young age and lived with her grandmother. The cottage at the lake was a special gathering place for Emma’s friends, the ones she bonded with in their Manhattan days: Mackenzie Hayes and Serena Stockton.
Now, after a five-year absence, Emma has invited her old friends to the lake house for a week in the summer.
But when they arrive in Manhattan, before heading up to the Adirondacks cottage, they are stunned by the news that Emma is in the hospital, after sustaining major injuries. Her daughter Zoe, almost sixteen, is waiting for them at Mt. Sinai.
While Emma is in her coma, we see flashbacks of the friends over the years, learning about what kept them together…and pondering what might have separated them.
Mackenzie is going through her own angst, as her husband Adam is in LA, meeting with production companies about his screenplay. For the past twenty years, they have been living in Indiana, running a small theater. Mackenzie writes a popular blog.
Meanwhile, Serena, an actor, portrays a cartoon character, and she has received a lot of attention and some fame. But the loss of her long-ago love, Brooks Anderson, has left her bereft and making poor choices.
Why did Emma call her friends together? What does she have in mind? Explanations, or is there a deep, dark secret that will change everything between them?
Finally they are all at the lake, and as Emma heals, with the moments and days ticking away like a time bomb, we learn bits and pieces. I guessed the secret long before it was revealed. And it was a doozy. Despite that fact, I enjoyed seeing how the ramifications would all play out.
Will the friendships survive? Will Mac’s marriage go on after the decisions Adam made in LA? And what will Serena do when an unexpected brush with the past puts her in another quandary? A Week at the Lake was another novel from a favorite author that I enjoyed all the way to the end. 5 stars.
I’ll be meeting the author this Friday at a luncheon and getting my copy then. Glad to hear such a positive review.
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Oh, good for you, Donna…the closest I’ve come to the author was having an interview with her for one of my blogs. Enjoy the book!
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I enjoyed reading your review Laurel. I loved this book too.
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Thanks, Pat, wasn’t it a delight?
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Another good Wendy Wax book. I enjoyed it as well!
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Definitely! I had the same problem with comments not showing up at your blog yesterday…LOL. Thanks for stopping by, Mary.
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