Walk to Remember by Nicholas Sparks

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(Mass Market Paperback - Reissue)

  • Pub. Date: September 2000
  • 256pp
  • Sales Rank: 2,816
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    Reader Rating: (944 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Touching" See All

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    • Overview
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: September 2000
    • Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
    • Format: Mass Market Paperback, 256pp
    • Sales Rank: 2,816

    Synopsis

    There was a time when the world was sweeter...when the women in Beaufort, North Carolina, wore dresses, and the men donned hats...when something happened to a seventeen-year-old boy that would change his life forever. Every April, when the wind blows in from the sea and mingles with the scent of lilacs, Landon Carter remembers his last year at Beaufort High. It was 1958, and Landon had already dated a girl or two. He even swore that he had once been in love. Certainly the last person in town he thought he'd fall for was Jamie Sullivan, the daughter of the town's Baptist minister. A quiet girl who always carried a Bible with her schoolbooks, Jamie seemed content living in a world apart from the other teens. She took care of her widowed father, rescued hurt animals, and helped out at the local orphanage. No boy had ever asked her out. Landon would never have dreamed of it. Then a twist of fate made Jamie his partner for the homecoming dance, and Landon Carter's life would never be the same. Being with Jamie would show him the depths of the human heart and lead him to a decision so stunning it would send him irrevocably on the road to manhood. No other author today touches our emotions more deeply than Nicholas Sparks. Illuminating both the strength and the gossamer fragility of our deepest emotions, his two New York Times bestsellers, The Notebook and Message in a Bottle, have established him as the leading author of today's most cherished love stories. Now, in A Walk to Remember, he tells a truly unforgettable story, one that glimmers with all of his magic, holding us spellbound-and reminding us that in life each of us may find one great love, the kind that changes everything...

    Publishers Weekly

    Sure to wring yet more tears from willing readers' eyes, the latest novel by the bestselling Sparks is a forced coming-of-age story concerning a pair of unlikely young lovers. In a corny flashback device that mimics The Notebook, 57-year-old Landon Carter spirits himself back to his fateful senior year in high school in Beaufort, N.C., when he was an archetypal troublemaking teenager of the 1950s, changed forever by an unexpected first love. Jamie Sullivan, the Bible-toting minister's daughter, with her drab brown sweaters, spinster hairstyle and sincere, beatific advice, is the obvious target of high school ridicule. Despite conspiring in Jamie's derision, class president Landon, desperate for a date for the homecoming dance, finds himself asking Jamie. Afterwards, Jamie asks him to participate with her in the metaphor-laden school Christmas play (Jamie plays the angel). Landon endures the taunting of his friends and forms an uneasy friendship with Jamie, which is carefully supervised by her father. The teens visit needy orphans, give Oscar-worthy performances in the school play and share dreams watching the sunset. Landon realizes he's in love with Jamie, but, of course, she is hiding a devastating secret that could wring her from Landon's arms forever. Now tortured by his knowledge of what will be her terrible fate, he must make the ultimate decision that catapults him into adulthood. Readers may be frustrated with the invariable formula that Sparks seems to regurgitate with regularity. Although the narrator declares, "My story can't be summed up in two or three sentences; it can't be packaged into something neat and simple that people would immediately understand," this is the author's most simple, formulaic, and blatantly melodramatic package to date. (Oct.) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

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    Biography

    Sparks is a sort of national sweetheart -- a good-looking family man who writes heart-tugging novels that rarely fail to elicit tears or book sales. His wildly popular The Notebook kicked off a steady string of quietly triumphant love stories.

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    Customer Reviews

    Good Bookby daddys_girlCH

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    November 15, 2009: I really enjoy this book it was a very good book to read and I would tell every one about it.

    When I started reading it it is hard to put it down but I did.

    A Romance for the Simple Mindby LePhantomsOphelian

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    November 03, 2009: A walk to remember is centered in small town, 1950's teenage romance. It's sweet and light hearted, but doesn't illustrate much passion in its romances. It's modest and pretty much the kind of romance a parent would want for their teen: Sweet and monitered. Even the setting is mild mannered as you picture a serene beach town setting with relaxed emotion. Not much dare or drama within, but enough for maybe a 12 year-old homeschooled girl. The characters are lovable and easy to know when it comes to personalities, which are really not complex and at times stereotypical. You know the town punk when you first read his name, or the kindly neighbor. The writing isn't provoking, but very easy to read and you can really glide right through it in a day. The events within are not hard to guess ahead of time and are not riveting. Those who look for a passionate, adventurous, provocative will have to look else where. But if you are about 36 years old and have nothing to do on a Sunday afternoon, here, take it and go.


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