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In her fifty-ninth bestselling novel, Danielle Steel tells an
unforgettable story of survival...of how two people who lost
everything find hope...and of the extraordinary acts of faith and
courage that bring —and keep— families together...
On a windswept summer day, as the fog rolls across the San
Francisco coastline, a solitary figure walks down the beach, a dog
at her side. At eleven, Pip Mackenzie's young life has already been
touched by tragedy; nine months before, a terrible accident plunged
her mother into inconsolable grief. But on this chilly July
afternoon, Pip meets someone who fills her sad gray world with
color and light. And in her innocence and in his kindness, a spark
will be kindled, lives will be changed, and a journey of hope will
begin.
From the moment the curly-haired girl walks up to his easel on the
sand, Matt Bowles senses something magical about her. Pip reminds
him of his own daughter at that age, before a bitter divorce tore
his family apart and swept his children halfway across the world.
With her own mother, Ophélie, retreating deeper into her grief,
Pip spends her summer at the shore the way lonely children do:
watching the glittering waters and rushing clouds, daydreaming and
remembering how things used to be. That is, until she meets artist
Matt Bowles, who offers to teach the girl to draw—and can't help
but notice her beautiful, lonely mother. At first, Ophélie is
thrown off balance by her daughter's new companion—until she
realizes how much joy he is bringing into their lives, despite the
sadness she sees in his eyes. As their newfound friend works his
subtle magic, mother and daughter slowly begin to heal, to laugh
again, to rediscover what they have lost.
When summer ends, and Ophélie and Pip must leave the beach for the
city, the season of healing continues. Gathering her newfound
strength, Ophélie begins a volunteer job at a city outreach
program, where she works with the homeless, and can no longer
ignore the blessings in her own life. But as soul-sharing phone
calls and autumn beach getaways deepen Ophélie and Matt's
friendship, fate strikes another blow. Out of the blue, Matt must
confront unfinished business from his past. Days later, Ophélie is
struck by a stunning betrayal by someone she trusts. And as these
events reverberate in two already wounded hearts, something
extraordinary happens. Out of the darkness that has shadowed them
both comes an unexpected gift of hope.
With grace and compassion, Danielle Steel explores the fragile
bonds between mothers and daughters, husbands and wives, family
members and lifelong friends. Her haunting, impassioned novel takes
us across the complex landscape of loss—to the blessings that
arise from even the darkest tragedies. At once a story of triumph
and a moving elegy to those who suffer and survive, Safe Harbour is
perhaps her most powerful and life-affirming novel to date.
From the Hardcover edition.
One of the two worst books I have ever readReviewed by B. Nichols, 2008-08-22
This is easily one of the two worst books I have ever read in my life. It's an insult to writing and storytelling. The story itself is thin and lame, the characters have no depth and it is clear that no one edited the book. Danielle Steel's prose is filled with unnecessary commas, paragraphs with sentences that contradict one another and trite sayings and descriptions. My advice is to not waste your time reading this horrible book. Doing anything else, including staring into space, would be a better use of one's time.
Safe HarbourReviewed by smartnurse123, 2008-08-22
The story begins with a young girl named Pip who, while walking on the beach with her dog, meets an attractive middle-aged artist and then starts up a father-daughter type of friendship with him. Over the summer she goes to meet him each day. In time, Pip brings her mother to meet Matt. She hopes that they will be attracted to each other. She is desperate for a father figure and would like her mother to be happy again. Ophelie, Pip's mother, is a depressed widow and is fearful about starting up a new relationship. She attends a support group to discuss her feelings surrounding her late husband's and son's accidental death. Over time, she and Matt develop a low-key relationship and in the end, it becomes a steamy romance. Through unexpected twists and turns Pip gets her wish and a new baby as well.
RepetitiveReviewed by Tabitha Norwood, 2008-06-11
I've read DS before and I know that basically every book is the same. A woman who has lost someone, scared to start over, meets someone new, resists falling in love, but eventually does, etc., etc., etc. I get that, I'm fine with that, but I am reading Safe Harbour and it get extremely irritating to read the run on sentences and the same sentences being used over and over again throughout the entire book................Please be more careful in the editing process.
Wow!Reviewed by esquímaux, 2007-04-23
I'm definitely not one to read books....AT ALL. However, I had a couple of minutes before going into work one day and picked up a random book. From the turning of the first few pages, I was hooked. As a matter of fact, I read a fourth of the book by days end. From my reading, Mrs. Steel captures the feelings of despair, hopelessness, and grief in great depth with her style. Ophelie shelved her life and happily traded it for a super-subservient one to her husband. And when he dies, Ophelie is left trying to piece together a fragile puzzle called her life. If you can relate to the grief of losing great hope, then this book will suck you right in like a black hole... it kidnapped me. Also, Mrs. Steel's style is rather flowing so it's easy to get lost in the pages. I am going to read more of Mrs. Steel's books.
If I could have given 0 stars...Reviewed by kaimarie, 2006-10-26
I would have. I have never read Danielle Steel, and once I went to
pick up a book of hers and saw that it was priced above the normal
amount for a paperback. I put it down, assuming she must be really
good, but as I hadn't read anything by her, I wasn't willing to pay
extra to do so. Well, I got Safe Harbor from my local library on
audiobook and figured I'd give her a try.
As I listened to this novel, I got very tired of the amateur lack
of descriptiveness, and of the redundancy. I noticed that a few
things were said over and over again throughout the novel, like the
fact that she had so much to do before the tragedy, and now...
afterward she had too much free time, and even though things were
hard before, she'd rather have the "business" of a mentally ill son
and a husband that didn't care about her. As if the readers
wouldn't remember, or as if we didn't get her point the first 3
times. Many things were repeated like that, and I felt like I was
listening to a fifth grade creative writing assignment where the
student had to meet a word requirement and didn't have enough
content.
Ophelie is weak, simple, and boring, as is Matt. They have no
personality. The version I am listening to is the unabridged
verson, so I can't possibly be just missing something. I understand
that this is supposedly a novel of triumph and the will to survive,
but she didn't even care for her child, and it had been a year.
Perhaps these things do happen in real life, but I'd much rather
read about women with some semblance of a spine. It should have
been one or the other, Ophelie's husband should have been worth
mourning so thoroughly.
I assumed this must have been one of her very first novels for it
to be so blah, but I checked the publication date... and I'm in
shock.
Perhaps Danielle Steel feels she is above having to deliver a
quality novel with her fame, I can't begin to understand how such a
reknown author could release something so terrible.