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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Amazon This book has a movie out that I have watched, so I decided to read the book to see how it compared to the movie. I think I liked the book better than the movie. A struggling newspaper columnist, Peyton MacGruder finds herself with a note from a passenger on a plane that has crashed and left no survivors. She is on a quest to find the person the note was written to. Along the way she discovers how the note affects everyone in life, especially Peyton and her life. It is a story about forgiveness and I enjoyed seeing how the author brought the note to conclusion. I liked this book. It wasn't my favorite, but I liked the way it was written. There is an air of mystery weaved into the sad story of the plane crash, that devastates everyone in the country. I really wasn't too sure about this book at the start. It opens with the scene on board flight 848 moments before it crashes when we are introduced to several of the passengers. Then the story shifts to what is actually the main event - Peyton MacGruder and her colleagues in the press office. And it took off, for me, from about the third chapter. The author has, quite skillfully, woven together the Biblical offer of forgiveness and the possible human responses to it. A second strand of the narrative explores the character and history of Peyton. And, of course, there's an element of romance although this is down-played and the book is definately not mushy. It's about forgiveness - not romantic love. I didn't particularly like the 'Comment' sections which the author uses to give us the characters' impressions of Peyton. She didn't seem to use quite the right voice in these parts - but perhaps I simply imagined the characters in a slightly different way to that intended. Other than that, this was a very satisfying read and I'll look for more from this author. no reviews | add a review
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| Book description |
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When the unthinkable happens . . .
En route from New York's LaGuardia Airport to Tampa International, Flight 848 bursts into flames and crashes into Tampa Bay. All 261 passengers and crew are killed. For one week, newspaper columnist Peyton MacGruder and her fellow reporters cover one of the nation's worst air disasters in years with overwhelming and numbed emotions.
Then a woman Peyton's never met gives her a plastic bag that has washed up behind her house. The bag contains a note, almost certainly from the doomed flight, with a simple yet wrenching message: T- I love you. All is forgiven. -Dad
Combing through the passenger list to find the victims whose children's names begin with T, Peyton is determined to deliver the note to its proper owner. A quest which will prove as important to Peyton's own life as to the mysterious T.
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:19 -0400)
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