Home :: Books :: Audio CDs  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs

Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Coast Road

Coast Road

List Price: $9.95
Your Price: $8.96
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Another Delinsky delight
Review:

I found myself quickly drawn into this book. The characters were engaging, the settings were vivid and the story was intense. There were lots of chances for Jack to leave, but he stuck by his ex-wife Rachel's side throughout her coma, meeting her new friends from her new life and caring for the teenage daughters who barely remembered him. One daughter is already coping with the loss of a beloved pet, the other is 'fifteen going on thirty'. Throughout, he finds himself remembering the good times with his ex-wife and decides to rededicate himself to his family, quitting his high-stress job that kept him away from them in the first place. I was moved to tears at several points, something a book rarely does for me. I highly recommend this book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An enjoyable read, but not one of her best
Review: COAST ROAD by Barbara Delinsky

A man looks back on his marriage and where life may soon lead him, in COAST ROAD. Barbara Delinsky paints a picture of life along the Monterey coast of California, where a middle-aged woman lays in a coma while her children, friends, and her ex-husband wait for her to awaken.

Jack McGill is a highly successful architect, designing resorts and casinos and other high-end projects. His ex-wife Rachel is an artist, who moved to Monterey to seek the life she missed when she was married and living with Jack in San Francisco. It is six years since their divorce, and now Jack is back to take care of Rachel, who was in a horrible car accident and now is in a coma. Their two daughters Samantha and Hope are devastated, and are having a hard time adjusting to having dad back in their lives again. Rachel's friends know about Jack, or at least they know Rachel's version of Jack, and they look at him with caution and suspicion.

But as Jack does all he can to support his daughters, and waits by his ex-wife's bedside, he looks back on all that has happened since Rachel left him, and through her friends, he slowly finds out why she had left him. COAST ROAD is a story of memories and contemplation, as Jack finds out what is truly most important to him. He juggles his priorities and makes new ones. But most of all, he finds the family that he thought he had lost six years ago.

I have to admit COAST ROAD is not my favorite Barbara Delinsky book. It is much different from the other books I've read by her so far. While LAKE NEWS, ACCIDENTAL WOMAN and FLIRTING WITH PETE either have a mystery involved or have a lot of suspense, COAST ROAD has neither. The main theme in COAST ROAD revolves around the marriage of Rachel and Jack, and what went wrong. It's a book about making things right, and getting closure. I didn't feel it was a fast read and it wasn't a "can't put the book down" type of book. However, as a fan of Barbara Delinsky and a fan of women's literature, COAST ROAD is not a bad book at all, and I did enjoy it. As someone else here on Amazon put it, this is a love story, and I'm always up for reading one. With that said, I recommend reading this book.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Could have been memorable
Review: Coast Road had the potential to be a memorable, moving story, but its potential was defeated for me by what I perceive as authorial laziness and by errors.

By around page 100, I found myself distracted from the story by apprehension that Jack would push another hand through his hair. The author could have varied that character trait, but she seemed too enamored with it. So, rather than having a trait that enhanced the "fictive dream" the author created an annoyance that kept me from fully engaging with the characters and the story.

Then, when we learn on page 157 that Jack had traded Rachel's old VW bug because it had a bad radiator I gave up. VW bugs (Beetle, for those who don't remember the originals) had ***air-cooled*** engines, which do not use radiators. Also, unless she had signed the title over to him, he could not just trade in her car without her permission.

Combine all the above with Jack's aptitude for asking medically astute questions (he's supposed to be an architect, not a doctor) and, well, I just couldn't finish even though the story itself was more or less compelling.

I think the author was in too much of a hurry to get to book 66 (the jacket claims that she'd written 65 novels) to clean up the errors in a final draft. I'm sure this book will be loved by fans of soap operas and supermarket fiction, but I doubt that discerning readers will make it to the end.

I give it two stars for the idea and for the good use of detail when it's accurate.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Rediscovering family love
Review: Having seen the paperback on the rack and reading a brief review from a guild publication, I decided to try Coast Road by Barbara Delinsky, a first-time author read. How could I have missed a Delinsky book - this was wonderful! In such a tender love story, it was so refreshing to have a male as the dominant character and read and feel from his perspective. The evolution of the story as told and seen from Jack McGill, his daughters, Rachel's friends and family was compelling. Sometimes you don't want a cliched happy ending, but I was rooting for this family all the way. The reawakening love for his ex-wife and his daughters and, in turn, their acceptance of him made for many teary scenes. It was refreshing to see compassion, tenderness, friendship, confusion, determination, hostility, impatience, and love woven so intrically together without explicit sex. Delinsky's description of the Big Sur area was so vivid. I've never been there, but feel like I have now. A sequel would be welcome, but in the meantime I'll be reading other Delinsky works.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Intelligent reading fare.
Review: I've read Barbara Delinsky's books for years from her category romances to her more recent mainstream fiction and she continues to deliver very intelligent, contemporary reading.

The thing I like best of about this novel is that we get to watch a man learn about a woman. Even though Jack has been married to Rachel for several years, is father to her two children and has maintained a civil yet distant relationship with her for 6 years of divorce, he really doesn't know this woman at all. He has to learn about her hopes, her dreams, her lifestyle, and simply about her through her friends and her children. The people themselves tell as much about Rachel as their words and it is a nicely executed book that can pull off the layers of a person slowly and allow such discovery. Also in the process, Jack discovers himself as well. And he realizes, that although he might not have known Rachel as well as he thought, she really knew him.

There is a small subplot about a rebellious teenage daughter that adds a layer of reality and texture to the story. However, the semi-mystical moments that involve the other daughter and the next door neighbor seem to be just filler and add unecessary drama.

Overall a good read, which I recommend.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Great book if you like to fantasize
Review: I've read one of Barbara Delinsky's books about eight years ago, and I was impressed. That book, A Woman Betrayed, kept me in search of an interesting book Barbara. Admittedly, Coast Road is readable, but the plot is unrealistic. Jack and Rachel's two daughters, 13 and 15 year old, had the intelligence of 3 and 5 year olds. Rachel was the one with the head injuries, but one has to wonder if Jack suffered from head injuries also. The story was told in 16 days, which seemed to be enough time for Jack to realize that he's put the love of his life on the back burner for the past six year. Grow up Jack! The only good thing about Coast Road is the fact that Delinsky keeps the reader interested in finding out whether or not Rachel wakes up.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Trying to See it From another Prespective....
Review: In this story, Jack McGill, who has choosen his career over his family numerous times gets a wake up call when he discovers that his ex-wife Rachel is in a coma after a car accident. Jack never stopped loving Rachel, and for the first time in his life he puts his career on hold and goes to Rachels bedside, and to his two daughters. He discovers both his daughter and his wife are not the people he always thought them to be and that he somehow "missed the forest for the trees". With verbal abuse as well as a lot of guidance from Rachel's new friends, and his own daughters, Jack begins to reevaluate his life.

Coast Road touches on many different topics, such as miscarriage, divorce, traveling husbands, breast cancer, as well as what it is like for those around a coma patient, but don't let that deter you. This is a well written rewarding read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: My favorite so far! I loved it!
Review: Since recently having discovered this author I have read Together alone, An accidental woman, the woman next door and Lake news. I found all of them to be enjoyable light reading this book was no exception however I found Coast Road not only uplifting but it also raises some meaningful questions about relationships.

This book is about a couple who got a divorce when their relationship got "stuck" and neither of them were able to see past their own struggles to be able to communicate with each other. And now years later Jack is brought back in his ex-wife life while she's in a coma and thru her friends and the life she has built for herself he rediscovers not only his love for her but also reconnects with his daughters and ultimately finds himself in the process.This book would make an amazing movie, it's a feel good story with substance !

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Makes the ordinary into the extraordinary
Review: This is a classic love story, but for most of the book, it's one-sided. That's because the ex-wife is in a coma!

This would make a great movie. Three Wishes (with Patick Swayze) was written by this author. Loved the movie. This book didn't disappoint.

It took a little bit for the story to get going, but not long, and when it did, you were drawn in to the characters lives. I thought the sub-plots really helped with keeping interest alive.

I definately recommend this book for the romantics out there.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A different type of book
Review: Yo don't often read a book like this--at least with this story line. I kept expecting Jack to fall on his face and just chuck it all, but the author does a great job of making him into a human so that the reader can see what is going on behind the mask. I thought this book was pretty true to life--relationship wise. Sometimes, spouses expect too much of the other without actual communication, and when that breaks down, they need to figure out how to get it back. I loved how Jack was able to re-discover his kids and his talent.

A great book from a great author. Enjoy!


<< 1 2 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates