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Loading... Never Changeby Elizabeth Berg
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Tearjerker. The grownup equivalent of Barbara Conklin's young adult classic [book: P.S. I Love You]. ( )"Never Change" is a beautifully drawn portrait of a lonely woman who expects nothing special to come into her life. However, life being what it is, things can turn on a dime and often do. She finds a beautiful life offered up to her though only for a short time. By the end of that period of time she comes to realize that we take what life offers us and sometimes we can turn it into a glorious life that we love living. She also realizes that we can refuse to accept what life has to offer. Elizabeth Berg has a gift for exploring the human mind and heart and showing us through fiction that we all have choices in our daily lives to make them beautiful and successful or common, ordinary and miserable. An exceptional read. Reading Elizabeth Berg is the equivalent of eating comfort food - a guilty pleasure - almost, but not quite, junk food. I enjoyed this book as much as I have enjoyed all of her books. As always, it's about relationships; the basic ups and downs of every day life; the differences and, more importantly, the similarities between the have's and have-nots, the lucky and the unlucky in love, the beautiful and the not so beautiful. It's easy to write her books off as trite fairy tales - but in fact, her strength is that she makes us believe that fairy tales can and will come true, if only we'll open our hearts to the possibilities. Elizabeth Berg captures the essence of the human need for companionship in this novel. A rather heartbreaking tale of a spinster who is given a second chance to find love. I find all of Elizabeth Berg's books enjoyable. Being a nurse myself, I enjoy reading stories that involve them. This book was a geat read, the characters were enjoyable, and I suggest this book to anyone who adores Mrs. Berg. no reviews | add a review
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In Never Change, Berg uses her gift to great advantage. Middle-aged Myra Lipinsky describes herself as "the one who sat on a folding chair out in the hall with a cigar box on my lap selling tickets to the prom, but never going." And despite a flourishing career as a visiting nurse, she feels as much an also-ran as ever. As the novel begins, in fact, high school seems to be rearing its ugly head again: Chip Reardon, the heartthrob of Myra's youth, has returned to town to live with his parents. Chip is dying from a brain tumor, and Myra becomes his nurse. Berg is not the kind of writer to lay bare the unsettling power dynamics of such a situation. Instead, Chip and Myra become friends and, well, learn how to love each other. It's a testament to the author's strong sense of character that we actually believe--and what's more, care about--Myra's emergence from her emotional cocoon. And the book is full of nice details, like this snapshot of children being read to at a library, "rising up on their knees to see the pictures, resting their hands unselfconsciously on those ahead of them so that they would not lose their balance." Such careful observations, recounted in Myra's voice, make us believe that she is a character worth knowing, and worth saving. --Claire Dederer
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:22 -0400)
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