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The Bridge: A Novel von Karen Kingsbury
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The Bridge: A Novel (Original 2012; 2012. Auflage)

von Karen Kingsbury (Autor)

Reihen: The Bridge (0.5 and 1)

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6982933,280 (3.7)8
Ryan Kelly spends plenty of time at The Bridge--the oldest bookstore in historic downtown Franklin, Tennessee--remembering the times he and Molly Allen--who moved to Portland--once spent there, and now, with the bookstore in deep financial trouble, it will take a miracle to keep tragedy from unfolding.… (mehr)
Mitglied:risa81
Titel:The Bridge: A Novel
Autoren:Karen Kingsbury (Autor)
Info:Howard Books (2012), Edition: First Edition, 272 pages
Sammlungen:Lese gerade
Bewertung:
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Werk-Informationen

The Bridge: A Novel von Karen Kingsbury (2012)

  1. 00
    Kein Ort ohne dich: Roman von Nicholas Sparks (JenniferRobb)
    JenniferRobb: Similar dynamic of an older couple and a younger couple. Similar tone.
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Christian romance about 2 couples. The older married couple own a bookstore, called The Bridge. When it was destroyed in a flood, the owner gives up all hope. The younger couple met there to study together in college, until they drift apart and away from each other. When the bookstore owner is in an accident, the town alerts all frequent patrons of the bookstore to lend a hand, which lead the young couple back together again. ( )
  nancynova | May 3, 2024 |
It is almost Christmas time again! To celebrate, I am reviewing a book that takes place during the Christmas season. The story is set in the present with glimpses of the past (seven years prior) scattered throughout the book. The perspective frequently changes between Ryan, Molly, and Charlie.
As a bookworm, I greatly appreciate that the story is centered around a small, local bookstore. I thought the plot was great, except that it was very predictable with the many misunderstandings between the characters.
I always read this book at Christmastime and would recommend for others to as well. This short read, almost novella-like book, is perfect for a cold, December evening. ( )
  libraryofemma | Apr 18, 2024 |
While I can happily suspend disbelief for fantastical story elements, like elves and magic spells and talking trees and, yes, even miracles from God, I have very little tolerance for illogical or grossly improbable plot points in a story that is supposedly set in a realistic world and peopled by functioning adults. This, unfortunately, is one of those books.

More than one character is expected to take over a successful family business from their supposedly business-savvy parent, but is actively discouraged from learning basic business skills at university. A character who resists learning how to run a business is magically able to run a charitable foundation, which seems to consist of just approving scholarship applications and manning the adoptions desk at a pet shelter. I can get behind a miracle from God causing someone with massive brain injuries to suddenly wake from a coma with no neuro deficits, but all my sensibilities cry out at the notion that his visitors were allowed to store 9 boxes full of books in his ICU room alongside his ventilator and other medical equipment. That same ICU room also held an entire choir of carolers who came in to sing him awake. I’m not sure where those carolers were all standing. I imagined them perched on top of his ventilator, clinging to his IV poles, balancing on boxes of books, and sitting on each other’s laps along both sides of his bed.

Then there’s the thought processes employed by the characters, especially the main protagonists. The entire plot of lovers wrongfully separated for years hinges on the guy just accepting that the woman he desperately loves is planning to marry another, just because her overbearing father calls him up out of the blue and says so, and despite her already having explicitly told him she won’t. He doesn’t even ask her about it, and she doesn’t ask him why he’s suddenly turned cold. This goes on for years, and continues when they meet up again. Finally, after 5 minutes conversation, the misunderstanding is all cleared up and they’re going to live happily ever after, because of course they’re suddenly capable of having a mature and adult relationship.

Ugh.

Audiobook version, borrowed from my public library via Overdrive. January LaVoy’s performance was the best thing about this book.

I read this for the 2017 Romance Bingo reading challenge. This book clearly fits the square for TSTL (too stupid to live).
( )
  Doodlebug34 | Jan 1, 2024 |
Molly Allen and Ryan Kelly meet as students at Belmont College. They come from different backgrounds. Ryan grew up in Carthage, Mississippi and aspires to be a studio musician. Molly's father owns a large shipping company in San Francisco and wants her to manage that company and marry Preston Millington. She dreams of playing violin in a symphony orchestra. Since Molly and Ryan share a music major, some of their courses are the same. Although her parents' Brentwood home provides an ideal setting, she knows the house's servants would report Molly's study dates to her father who would then make her come back to San Francisco. Instead, they find an ideal place at a Franklin bookstore called "The Bridge" owned by Charlie and Donna Barton. Something goes wrong, and both go their separate ways. The devastating "Nashville flood" plays a major role in this Hallmark movie-style tale. I listened to the audio and enjoyed the narrator. ( )
  thornton37814 | Mar 3, 2021 |
In this novel we follow the connected story of four characters – Molly Allen, Ryan Kelly and Charlie & Donna Barton. Charlie and Donna own and run a bookstore called The Bridge, where Molly and Ryan spent a lot of their free time at during their first two years of college. They were inseparable, to the point where Charlie and Donna were convinced they’d be married someday.

But then Molly left.

Ryan never knew why.

Now it’s years later. Molly is running a successful branch of her father’s business, Ryan has toured the country as the lead guitarist of a famous country singer, and Charlie and Donna are trying to keep The Bridge alive after a flood completely wipes out the inside of their store.

The story of Molly and Ryan was one that is going to stay on my heart for some time. Call me a sucker, but I love a good story of two long-lost soul mates reuniting after a number of years have passed. I also enjoyed reading from the perspectives of Charlie and Donna and learning about their backgrounds and connection to Molly and Ryan. Like me, they were rooting for the two to get together when they were in college.

This was my first ever Karen Kingsbury book that I’ve read. My mom had told me she’s a great Christian-fiction writer and I can see why. This book brought tears to my eyes a number of times and at the same time warmed my heart. It was refreshing to read a book that focuses on the faith of the characters and their relationship with God as well as each other. I’m actually currently reading another book of hers and I can tell you I will continue to read more books by her. She’s definitely becoming one of my favorite authors.

One last note is that I fell in love with the bookstore their story revolves around, to the point that it makes me wish there was a small, homey bookstore just like The Bridge in my town. I guess I’ll just have to settle for opening one with my mom someday.

Anyway, I definitely recommend this book to anyone who is looking for a heartwarming story. ( )
  genieinanovel | Sep 15, 2020 |
keine Rezensionen | Rezension hinzufügen

» Andere Autoren hinzufügen

AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Karen KingsburyHauptautoralle Ausgabenberechnet
Castermans-Nelleke, SusanneÜbersetzerCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt

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Ryan Kelly spends plenty of time at The Bridge--the oldest bookstore in historic downtown Franklin, Tennessee--remembering the times he and Molly Allen--who moved to Portland--once spent there, and now, with the bookstore in deep financial trouble, it will take a miracle to keep tragedy from unfolding.

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Durchschnitt: (3.7)
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