Ratings1
Average rating5
Best In Series For Making You Want To Explore The Author's Other Works. With some of the other books in this series, the authors do a great job of referencing their other books, maybe even bringing in a character or two - or at least someone connected to them who can reference them in-story - to entice the reader of this series to explore their other books. It is very well done within the stories they are telling and doesn't feel forced at all, just a casual "hey, there's other stuff out there that may warrant exploration, if you're into these characters" type of vibe.
Yeah... Johnson doesn't go that route. He's far more in your face about it - without being in your face about it at all. Instead, he brings in one of his major characters from some of his other work and gets you invested in this character's story even within the context of the story he is telling here as part of Dragonfly Cove... and then tells you in the author's note at the end "Oh yeah, if you want to see what actually happens with that character, well, this character just so happens to be the titular character in these other books I wrote".
And yet the story here itself is at least as powerful as the one with that other character, here using a retiree set in her ways as our main character and telling a compelling story of an old "get off my lawn" curmudgeon (literally, in a couple of cases, telling people to leave her yard) who has very distinct thoughts about how things should be done learning to live again in a new situation. And, maybe, through the love and dedication of her puppy... maybe she just might fall in love again?
There are several subplots to this story that all show the complexities of elder life in various forms, which I know many readers are desperate for these days as seeming so few books deal in main characters of this particular age bracket - despite it being among the larger sets of the American population at the moment.
By far the longest book of this series at nearly 300 pages, this is also one of the most complex-yet-easy-to-read stories in the series as well.
Very much recommended.