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To See the Moon Again

par Jamie Langston Turner

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Every day of her life Julia Rich lives with the memory of a horrible accident she caused long ago. In the years since, she has tried to hide her guilt in the quiet routine of teaching at a small South Carolina college, avoiding close relationships with family and would-be friends. But one day a phone call from Carmen, a niece she has never met, disrupts her carefully controlled world. Carmen is a study in contrasts--comical yet wise, sunny yet contemplative, soft yet assertive. As she sets about gently drawing Julia from her self-imposed solitude into a place of hope, she also seeks her own peace for past mistakes. Together, the two women embark on a journey that takes Julia far from the familiar comfort of home and gives Carmen the courage to open her heart. Together, their sightseeing trip turns into a discovery of truth, grace, redemption, and, finally, love.… (plus d'informations)
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We carry our past with us every day of our lives. It has made us who were are, shaping us for better and for worse. Sometimes we barely notice what we bring forward with us and other times it weighs us down and reminds us every moment of who we were and what we did, forcing us to continually confront the ever present past. But there is a reason for the idea of forgiving and forgetting the things that continue to haunt us as the characters in Jamie Langston Turner's latest novel, To See the Moon Again, need to learn.

Julia Rich is an English professor at a small southern college. Her unassuming husband passed away last year and she's facing a sabbatical year she's not sure she wants to take. Her sister Pamela is a bit of a pest, calling and checking in all the time, whittering on about things going on in her life, and giving Julia advice for which she has no use. Julia is not terribly social and she's a bit aloof at the best of times. Her world is generally orderly and planned. So when she gets a phone message from Carmen, her late brother Jeremiah's only child, the niece she's never met, telling her that Carmen is planning to visit her, Julia immediately tries to figure out a way to stop this unknown teenager from appearing on her doorstep. But Carmen has left no way to reach her so all Julia can do is hope against hope that she doesn't turn up in the end. Of course, Carmen does show though.

When Carmen finally arrives to meet her Aunt Julia, Julia finds her heart cracking open just a little bit to let this charming girl in despite her desire not to allow this. As she gets to know her brother's child, she regrets the distance and the wrong assumptions that kept her from knowing the girl sooner, and sparing Carmen some of the heartache and sorrow she's already faced in her nineteen years. The two women slowly open up about their lives but even as they do so, Julia has to fight the urge to retreat emotionally at every turn. Carmen, on the other hand, is mostly open and sunny, engaging everyone around her and caring about their lives. Julia reflects on her family growing up and specifically her relationship with her mother as she and Carmen delve into the past And she finally faces the tragedy of so long ago and starts to allow herself to be forgiven. It takes Carmen far longer to admit to the devastation she carries with her and when she finally does on a road trip she and Julia are taking, she struggles with forgiving herself even when Julia turns Carmen's advice to her around on her.

Julia and Carmen are a study in contrasts as characters. Carmen has a certain faith in God no matter what hardships she's faced while Julia is resolutely skeptical and very frustrated by Carmen's simple acceptance. Carmen alternates from sweet and naively innocent to infuriatingly submissive, both to Julia and to the reader. The story is a quiet one packed with emotion. It explores the concept of sin, forgiveness, love, motherhood, and God's grace. The plot is not paramount, the connection between the characters is, which is a good thing because both Julia and Carmen's secrets are easily sussed out and just as easily explored or uncovered. The ending is hopeful and accepting, which suits the tone of the novel over all. Even so, it leaves the characters without real closure because, as Carmen says, "life goes on." Turner's novel is a nice, open book that will appeal to Christian fiction readers. ( )
  whitreidtan | Sep 4, 2014 |
I started reading this book and thought this was going to be another bummer book. In fact, I was ready to put it down until the arrival of Jeremiah's daughter, Carmen. Julia and her brother, Jeremiah became estranged. So Julia does not know anything about Carmen. In fact, she did not want her to come but she did not have much of a choice when Carmen appears on her doorstep. Her brother is dead and so his Carmen's mother. I instantly liked Carmen. Her flighty attitude and out look on life was refreshing. She helped Julia loosen up and become no so boring. They both grew and were like the yin and yang to each other. The bond they formed while together was nice. Because of this good bond, it made reading the rest of this book a breeze. ( )
  Cherylk | Aug 30, 2014 |
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Every day of her life Julia Rich lives with the memory of a horrible accident she caused long ago. In the years since, she has tried to hide her guilt in the quiet routine of teaching at a small South Carolina college, avoiding close relationships with family and would-be friends. But one day a phone call from Carmen, a niece she has never met, disrupts her carefully controlled world. Carmen is a study in contrasts--comical yet wise, sunny yet contemplative, soft yet assertive. As she sets about gently drawing Julia from her self-imposed solitude into a place of hope, she also seeks her own peace for past mistakes. Together, the two women embark on a journey that takes Julia far from the familiar comfort of home and gives Carmen the courage to open her heart. Together, their sightseeing trip turns into a discovery of truth, grace, redemption, and, finally, love.

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