Genre Fiction
- Publisher : Ballantine Books
- Published : 03 May 2022
- Pages : 304
- ISBN-10 : 0593358422
- ISBN-13 : 9780593358429
- Language : English
Summer Love: A Novel
Old secrets come to light when four friends gather on Nantucket for a life-changing reunion in this heartwarming novel of love and self-discovery by New York Times bestselling author Nancy Thayer.
When four strangers rent bargain-basement rooms in an old hotel near the beach, they embark on the summer of their lives. First there's Ariel Spencer, who has big dreams of becoming a writer and is looking for inspiration in Nantucket's high society. Her new friend Sheila Murphy is a good Catholic girl from Ohio whose desire for adventure is often shadowed by her apprehension. Then there's small-town Missourian Wyatt Smith, who's immediately taken with Ariel. The last of the four, Nick Volkov, is looking to make a name for himself and have a blast along the way. Despite their differences, the four bond over trips to the beach, Wednesday-night dinners, and everything that Nantucket has to offer. But venturing out on their own for the first time, with all its adventure and risks, could change the course of their lives.
Twenty-six years after that amazing summer, Ariel, Sheila, Wyatt, and Nick reunite at the hotel where they first met. Now it's called The Lighthouse and Nick owns the entire operation with his wife and daughter. Ariel and Wyatt, married for decades, arrive with their son, and Sheila's back too, with her daughter by her side. Life hasn't exactly worked out the way they had all hoped. Ariel's dreams have since faded and been pushed aside, but she's determined to rediscover the passion she once had. Nick has the money and reputation of a successful businessman, but is it everything he had hoped for? And Sheila has never been able to shake the secret she's kept since that summer. Being back together again will mean confronting the past and finding themselves. Meanwhile, the next generation discovers Nantucket: Their children explore the island together, experiencing love and heartbreak and forging lifelong bonds, just as their parents did all those years ago. It's sure to be one unforgettable reunion.
This delightful novel from beloved storyteller Nancy Thayer explores the potential of dreams and the beauty of friendship.
When four strangers rent bargain-basement rooms in an old hotel near the beach, they embark on the summer of their lives. First there's Ariel Spencer, who has big dreams of becoming a writer and is looking for inspiration in Nantucket's high society. Her new friend Sheila Murphy is a good Catholic girl from Ohio whose desire for adventure is often shadowed by her apprehension. Then there's small-town Missourian Wyatt Smith, who's immediately taken with Ariel. The last of the four, Nick Volkov, is looking to make a name for himself and have a blast along the way. Despite their differences, the four bond over trips to the beach, Wednesday-night dinners, and everything that Nantucket has to offer. But venturing out on their own for the first time, with all its adventure and risks, could change the course of their lives.
Twenty-six years after that amazing summer, Ariel, Sheila, Wyatt, and Nick reunite at the hotel where they first met. Now it's called The Lighthouse and Nick owns the entire operation with his wife and daughter. Ariel and Wyatt, married for decades, arrive with their son, and Sheila's back too, with her daughter by her side. Life hasn't exactly worked out the way they had all hoped. Ariel's dreams have since faded and been pushed aside, but she's determined to rediscover the passion she once had. Nick has the money and reputation of a successful businessman, but is it everything he had hoped for? And Sheila has never been able to shake the secret she's kept since that summer. Being back together again will mean confronting the past and finding themselves. Meanwhile, the next generation discovers Nantucket: Their children explore the island together, experiencing love and heartbreak and forging lifelong bonds, just as their parents did all those years ago. It's sure to be one unforgettable reunion.
This delightful novel from beloved storyteller Nancy Thayer explores the potential of dreams and the beauty of friendship.
Editorial Reviews
Praise for Summer Love
"Smell[s] of suntan lotion, the ocean breeze and that sweet summer spirit."-N Magazine
Praise for the novels of Nancy Thayer
Family Reunion
"Nancy Thayer's Family Reunion is a wonderful slice of life. Featuring true-to-life characters facing interesting-and challenging-family dynamics, as well as an incredible sense of place, this book is the ideal take-me-away beach read!"-New York Times bestselling author Brenda Novak
"Readers come to Nancy Thayer novels for the idyllic Nantucket beaches and lifestyle, but they stay for the characters. No one knows families like Nancy Thayer!"-New York Times bestselling author Mary Alice Munroe
Girls of Summer
"Wholesome and hopelessly romantic."-Kirkus Reviews
Surfside Sisters
"Readers who appreciate a busy, uplifting tale of friendship and romance will enjoy spending time on Thayer's Nantucket."-Publishers Weekly
"An engaging tale about how childhood expectations can be transformed on the journey through adulthood."-Kirkus Reviews
A Nantucket Wedding
"A delightful beach-town tale about family relationships and second chances."-Kirkus Reviews
"Thayer's latest Nantucket confection does not disappoint. . . . A Nantucket Wedding is a Nancy Meyers film in book form and should be recommended accordingly."-Booklist
Secrets in Summer
"Infused with warmth and heartfelt, tender moments . . . Authentic, endearing characters will ...
"Smell[s] of suntan lotion, the ocean breeze and that sweet summer spirit."-N Magazine
Praise for the novels of Nancy Thayer
Family Reunion
"Nancy Thayer's Family Reunion is a wonderful slice of life. Featuring true-to-life characters facing interesting-and challenging-family dynamics, as well as an incredible sense of place, this book is the ideal take-me-away beach read!"-New York Times bestselling author Brenda Novak
"Readers come to Nancy Thayer novels for the idyllic Nantucket beaches and lifestyle, but they stay for the characters. No one knows families like Nancy Thayer!"-New York Times bestselling author Mary Alice Munroe
Girls of Summer
"Wholesome and hopelessly romantic."-Kirkus Reviews
Surfside Sisters
"Readers who appreciate a busy, uplifting tale of friendship and romance will enjoy spending time on Thayer's Nantucket."-Publishers Weekly
"An engaging tale about how childhood expectations can be transformed on the journey through adulthood."-Kirkus Reviews
A Nantucket Wedding
"A delightful beach-town tale about family relationships and second chances."-Kirkus Reviews
"Thayer's latest Nantucket confection does not disappoint. . . . A Nantucket Wedding is a Nancy Meyers film in book form and should be recommended accordingly."-Booklist
Secrets in Summer
"Infused with warmth and heartfelt, tender moments . . . Authentic, endearing characters will ...
Readers Top Reviews
PLA
Pros: known author with a great reputation and great books published in the past. Nantucket is a beautiful setting for the book. Dual timeline story. Cons: I just couldn't connect with the characters or their lives, past or present. I'm sure its just me or something, as I've enjoyed other books by this author in the past. Thanks to the author, publisher and NetGalley for the opportunity to read and review this book, but my opinions are my own.
B Burke
This book was sent to me electronically for review by Netgalley. It is a quick fun read...love and romance...friendships...new and old...then and now...children who disappoint...those who don't...getting together after many years...rekindling...wondering what if...curl up under a warm afghan, sip some hot delicious tea, and enjoy this read on a snowy afternoon, thinking of Nantucket and the ocean...enjoy this one...
Lisa(New Hampshire)
I read to escape so I can visit places I have always dreamed about. I pretend I am strolling down the sidewalk with the characters, gazing into the quaint shops and watching the world go by. Thankfully, Nancy Thayer has given us a memorable escape to Nantucket in her amazing new book, “Summer Love.” I fell in love with the young Ariel, Sheila, Wyatt and Nick with their youthful exuberance and lives full of promise. I wanted to be there with them as they made the best of basement living as well as enjoying life on the island where anything was possible. I could just envision them with their eyes wide open, taking in the hustle and bustle and the romantic sunsets. Life was simpler in 1995 and Ariel, Sheila, Wyatt and Nick took everything they could from their summer on Nantucket to become the successful adults that came back to visit twenty-six years later. They appeared to be happy but not all of them had achieved the dreams they once had. Nick was a successful hotelier with a beautiful wife and daughter. I expected no less from him as he always had high expectations for himself. Sheila had a big family and a loving husband, but little time for herself. She saw this week as a time to relax, reflect and enjoy the peace and quiet that she desperately needed. Ariel and Wyatt fell in love the moment they met all those years ago but was she happy with how her life turned out? Could Ariel ever recapture the dreams she once had? Accompanying the old friends were their children; the next generation of young people to chase their dreams and fall in love on the enchanted island. Their parents shared stories of their summer, reminisced about the fun they had and wished they could do it all over again. The island offered their children a chance to spread their wings and have the time of their lives. Every year I hope to read a book that will change my life and this year, “Summer Love” was the one that captured my heart from the first page and pulled me into a story of love, friendship and chasing your dreams. Ms. Thayer’s masterpiece is a beautiful, poignant and touching tale that takes us away to a magical place where dreams come true, and friendships are made that will last a lifetime.
Kathleen Hughes
Summer Love moves seamlessly between 1995 and 2000, between four recent college graduates in the past and their three children in the present. Nantucket provides the magic that brings their stories to life. Wyatt, Ariel, Sheila and Nick arrive for their summer jobs, meet and become instant fast friends and roommates. After a summer of somewhat menial work, all will follow their dreams. Ariel will be a published author, Wyatt a scientist, Sheila married to her college boyfriend Hank and Nick will simply be very rich. Fast forward to their twenty-fifth reunion on Nantucket. Nick (yes, rich) has invited them to stay in his deluxe hotel, the one they lived in years ago while it was being renovated. His daughter Jade-Marie works for him and will follow him in the hotel business. Wyatt is a college professor and scientist. Ariel is his wife and, although she has been published in some sources, still wants to write a novel. Their son Jacob is with them. Wyatt has planned his future as a scientist like his father and grandfather. Sheila is married to Hank and has brought her daughter Penny to the reunion. As we see friendships begin in the summer of ’95, we see new ones beginning in the present. The parents are reevaluating their lives and their children are planning new paths, not the ones chosen for them. Secrets are revealed, new relationships are formed leading to a satisfying conclusion. I love Nancy Thayer’s books but this one was a little formulaic. Still, 4 stars. Nantucket can get nothing less. Thank you to NetGalley, Random House Publishing Group - Ballantine and Nancy Thayer for this ARC.
Elaine Carter
Old friends come together at the luxury hotel the most successful one owns with young adult children in two-completely predictable in some ways but absolutely surprising in other. Definitely a great start to the summer beach reads!
Short Excerpt Teaser
That Summer
Nantucket Island was thirty miles out at sea, with no bridge or tunnel connecting it to the mainland. Often gale force winds cut it off from boats or planes, and even on mild summer days, fog could drift around the island, enclosing the small world in a shimmer that made Nantucket seem almost unreal, a fantasy made of salt air, mist, and dreams.
Most summer days were clear, bright, and beautiful. For a century, people had come to the island to enjoy the warm beaches, the sparkling ocean, and easy evenings under the stars, dining at restaurants with top-notch chefs.
The natives and the "washed-ashores" resided on the island year-round. Others came for the summer, filling Nantucket's guesthouses and hotels. The small town of Nantucket had a movie theater, library, amateur theater, classical concerts, and bookstores, all within walking distance from the hotels. A person could step off a ferry onto the cobblestones and walk to his hotel or house. In the 1990s, the super-rich summered on Nantucket, but no one knew who they were, because they didn't want to "stand out," considering it vulgar.
When first built in the seventies, a hotel named the Nantucket Palace towered in fake aristocratic grandeur at the corner of South Beach Street and Easton Street. Every islander knew that "the Nantucket Palace" was a ridiculous name for a hotel on an island settled by Quakers who believed in simplicity, but summer people flocked there because it was close to the shops, the yacht club, and the beaches.
In the nineties, the Palace was sold to an entrepreneur who wanted to make the hotel contemporary and cool. He hired Sharon Waters to deal with the paperwork. Sharon was a prim woman in her thirties who loved nothing more than adding figures on her desktop calculator. She had no problem working at a hotel that was in the middle of a renovation. Sharon had worked for the former owner. Now she was smoothly and happily dealing with the mounds of tedious paperwork for the new owners, who had demolished much of the hotel before being ordered to cease work until every form was signed, submitted, and approved. This fall and winter, the owners would build the new hotel and planned to name it Rockers. Sharon's office was just above the basement with its industrial-size laundry, four single bedrooms for staff, and one bathroom. Sharon was appointed to find tenants to rent the bedrooms in the basement of the one wing of the hotel that remained.
The word was out that there was summer money on Nantucket, and in the late spring, college graduates from near and far swarmed the island, looking for jobs and temporary living quarters. Of the many applicants, Sharon had awarded them to the four people she thought least likely to hold wild parties or destroy the rooms.
First, Ariel Spencer, who came from a good family, had just graduated from a good college, and lived in a pleasant Massachusetts suburb. Ariel had the quiet, sweet manner of a person who knows she's fortunate and wants you to be fortunate, too.
Second: Sheila Murphy. A good Catholic girl with bright red hair, she came from Ohio and had just graduated from Cleveland State University. Pretty but plump, Sheila was so shy Sharon Waters wanted to yell "Boo" at her for the pleasure of seeing her jump, but Sheila had worked as a maid at the Cleveland Renaissance and came with sterling recommendations.
Third: Wyatt Smith. Sharon took one look at him and thought: good guy. He looked reliable. Trustworthy. Sensible. A graduate of the University of Missouri in Columbia, he majored in geology, but he looked more like a runner than a geek. Lanky and tall, with tidy brown hair and nice blue eyes, he'd grown up in a small Missouri town. This summer he had a job at Cabot's Marine, repairing boats, selling parts. He was a quiet young man, respectful of Sharon, and she liked that.
Fourth, and a bit of a gamble, was Nicolas Volkov. With his curly black hair and sleepy amber eyes, he was more handsome than any guy should be, and obviously the kind who would flirt with anyone, probably to keep his skills sharp or maybe he just couldn't help himself. At his interview, he gave Sharon a sexy sleepy-eye look, even though Sharon was clearly in her thirties and not interested. He'd gone to Harvard, of course, and had a job at Fanshaw's, a new, posh men's clothing store run by a snobbish Brit. Nick was a descendant of an ancient aristocratic Russian family, he told Sharon, but they had fallen on hard times. His parents had had to sell their Fabergé Easter egg and some of their jewelry to afford his college tuition, w...
Nantucket Island was thirty miles out at sea, with no bridge or tunnel connecting it to the mainland. Often gale force winds cut it off from boats or planes, and even on mild summer days, fog could drift around the island, enclosing the small world in a shimmer that made Nantucket seem almost unreal, a fantasy made of salt air, mist, and dreams.
Most summer days were clear, bright, and beautiful. For a century, people had come to the island to enjoy the warm beaches, the sparkling ocean, and easy evenings under the stars, dining at restaurants with top-notch chefs.
The natives and the "washed-ashores" resided on the island year-round. Others came for the summer, filling Nantucket's guesthouses and hotels. The small town of Nantucket had a movie theater, library, amateur theater, classical concerts, and bookstores, all within walking distance from the hotels. A person could step off a ferry onto the cobblestones and walk to his hotel or house. In the 1990s, the super-rich summered on Nantucket, but no one knew who they were, because they didn't want to "stand out," considering it vulgar.
When first built in the seventies, a hotel named the Nantucket Palace towered in fake aristocratic grandeur at the corner of South Beach Street and Easton Street. Every islander knew that "the Nantucket Palace" was a ridiculous name for a hotel on an island settled by Quakers who believed in simplicity, but summer people flocked there because it was close to the shops, the yacht club, and the beaches.
In the nineties, the Palace was sold to an entrepreneur who wanted to make the hotel contemporary and cool. He hired Sharon Waters to deal with the paperwork. Sharon was a prim woman in her thirties who loved nothing more than adding figures on her desktop calculator. She had no problem working at a hotel that was in the middle of a renovation. Sharon had worked for the former owner. Now she was smoothly and happily dealing with the mounds of tedious paperwork for the new owners, who had demolished much of the hotel before being ordered to cease work until every form was signed, submitted, and approved. This fall and winter, the owners would build the new hotel and planned to name it Rockers. Sharon's office was just above the basement with its industrial-size laundry, four single bedrooms for staff, and one bathroom. Sharon was appointed to find tenants to rent the bedrooms in the basement of the one wing of the hotel that remained.
The word was out that there was summer money on Nantucket, and in the late spring, college graduates from near and far swarmed the island, looking for jobs and temporary living quarters. Of the many applicants, Sharon had awarded them to the four people she thought least likely to hold wild parties or destroy the rooms.
First, Ariel Spencer, who came from a good family, had just graduated from a good college, and lived in a pleasant Massachusetts suburb. Ariel had the quiet, sweet manner of a person who knows she's fortunate and wants you to be fortunate, too.
Second: Sheila Murphy. A good Catholic girl with bright red hair, she came from Ohio and had just graduated from Cleveland State University. Pretty but plump, Sheila was so shy Sharon Waters wanted to yell "Boo" at her for the pleasure of seeing her jump, but Sheila had worked as a maid at the Cleveland Renaissance and came with sterling recommendations.
Third: Wyatt Smith. Sharon took one look at him and thought: good guy. He looked reliable. Trustworthy. Sensible. A graduate of the University of Missouri in Columbia, he majored in geology, but he looked more like a runner than a geek. Lanky and tall, with tidy brown hair and nice blue eyes, he'd grown up in a small Missouri town. This summer he had a job at Cabot's Marine, repairing boats, selling parts. He was a quiet young man, respectful of Sharon, and she liked that.
Fourth, and a bit of a gamble, was Nicolas Volkov. With his curly black hair and sleepy amber eyes, he was more handsome than any guy should be, and obviously the kind who would flirt with anyone, probably to keep his skills sharp or maybe he just couldn't help himself. At his interview, he gave Sharon a sexy sleepy-eye look, even though Sharon was clearly in her thirties and not interested. He'd gone to Harvard, of course, and had a job at Fanshaw's, a new, posh men's clothing store run by a snobbish Brit. Nick was a descendant of an ancient aristocratic Russian family, he told Sharon, but they had fallen on hard times. His parents had had to sell their Fabergé Easter egg and some of their jewelry to afford his college tuition, w...