|
September 05, 2008
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| More Than Friends by Barbara Delinsky | Reviewed by Harriet Klausner |  | Publisher: William Morrow
http://wwww.harpercollins
ISBN: 0066214599
Genre: Fiction
Subgenre: Melodrama
Release date: Feb 2006
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 416
Price: $18.95
| Next door neighbors in Constance on the Rise, the Popes and the Maxwells have been close friends to each other seemingly forever, even sharing a summer place in Maine fittingly dubbed “Popewell”. Annie Pope and Teke Maxwell were college roommates, while their future spouses, John David “J. D.” Maxwell and Sam Pope, have been best buds since childhood and work as full partners at a Boston law firm whose top gun is the Maxwell patriarch, John Stewart. Nothing could rip apart the loving friendships between two generations of Popewells.
Nothing until tragedy occurs. Thirteen year old Michael Maxwell is shocked when he sees Teke and Sam making love. Stunned and feeling betrayed, Michael races outside without looking in front of a pickup truck driven by Teke’s former childhood boyfriend, Grady Piper. Michael remains in a coma from the accident while J. D. angrily wants to take out his frustration on everyone involved, especially Grady. However, all changes when the infidelity surfaces, leading the Popewells to war with one another while Michael lingers in a comatose state.
The key that keeps this fine family drama from becoming a melodramatic emoting soap opera is the reactions of the key cast members to the tragedy, as each in a restrained way feels as if he had caused the accident. Thus the ensemble, Popewells and Grady, seems genuine while coping poorly with what happened to the youngest. Barbara Delinsky is at her best with this sobering look at friendship. | | |
|