Login
Register
Home || Search || About us || Blog || Contact us || Other book sites

Name: Wish You Well

Author: David Baldacci
Year: 2000
Rank:

Rating:

Original Rating:

Popularity: 3.7
Genres/categories: Historical fiction, Mystery, Thriller

Purchase/research links:

ISBN:
9780330419697
9780613573337
0330419692
0613573331
David Baldacci has made a name for himself crafting big, burly legal thrillers with larger-than-life plots. However, Wish You Well, set in his native Virginia, is a tale of hope and wonder and "something of a miracle" just itching to happen. This shift from contentious urbanites to homespun hill families may come as a surprise to some of Baldacci's fans--but they can rest assured: the author's sense of pacing and exuberant prose have made the leap as well.
The year is 1940. After a car accident kills 12-year-old Lou's and 7-year-old Oz's father and leaves their mother Amanda in a catatonic trance, the children find themselves sent from New York City to their great-grandmother Louisa's farm in Virginia. Louisa's hardscrabble existence comes as a profound shock to precocious Lou and her shy brother. Still struggling to absorb their abandonment, they enter gamely into a life that tests them at every turn--and offers unimaginable rewards. For Lou, who dreams of following in her father's literary footsteps, the misty, craggy Appalachians and the equally rugged individuals who make the mountains their home quickly become invested with an almost mythic significance:

They took metal cups from nails on the wall and dipped them in the water, and then sat outside and drank. Louisa picked up the green leaves of a mountain spurge growing next to the springhouse, which revealed beautiful purple blossoms completely hidden underneath. "One of God's little secrets," she explained. Lou sat there, cup cradled between her dimpled knees, watching and listening to her great-grandmother in the pleasant shade...


Baldacci switches deftly between lovingly detailed character description (an area in which his debt to Laura Ingalls Wilder and Harper Lee seems evident) and patient development of the novel's central plot. If that plot is a trifle transparent--no one will be surprised by Amanda's miraculous recovery or by the children's eventual battle with the nefarious forces of industry in an attempt to save their great-grandmother's farm--neither reader nor character is the worse for it. After all, nostalgia is about remembering things one already knows. --Kelly Flynn


About the author:
David Baldacci (1960-) is a bestselling American novelist.

Similar books:

Kane And Abel
by Jeffrey Archer

As the Crow Flies
by Jeffrey Archer

Not a Penny More, Not a Penny Less
by Jeffrey Archer

About the Author
by John Colapinto

To the Bright and Shining Sun
by James Lee Burke

The Fourth Estate
by Jeffrey Archer

May We Be Forgiven
by A. M. Homes

Gap Creek
by Robert Morgan

The Translator
by John Crowley

At Paradise Gate
by Jane Smiley

The Seventh Secret
by Irving Wallace

Milk Glass Moon
by Adriana Trigiani

Detective
by Arthur Hailey

Overload
by Arthur Hailey

Loon Lake
by E. L. Doctorow

The Coffee Trader
by David Liss

Rose
by Martin Cruz Smith

The Devils of Cardona
by Matthew Carr

Istanbul Passage
by Joseph Kanon

Martyr
by Rory Clements