

A Risk Worth Taking
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Faye P. McIntyre
> 3 daywonderful, understanding ,beautiful lives .I want more
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Writers Corner
> 3 dayA Risk Worth Taking was recommended to me by my mother. The author is the son of the famous author Rosamunde Pilcher. Synopsis: Dan has recently been downsized from his job. He has moved his family to the suburbs of London. His wife Jackie picks up the slack by getting a job with Rebecca Towelworth Designs. Is there more going on with her job than meets the eye? They have three children Josh, Nina, and Millie. The girls hate their school and constantly complain to their father. Meanwhile Josh spends most of his nights out at clubs and a low paying job. All of the sudden Dan sees an article about a company looking for assistance in Womens Weekly. What happens when Dan decides to check out the company? And how will this affect the family? My Thoughts: I wish I could tell you that the sons writing is as good as the mothers. I was not impressed. I had a hard time getting started with this novel. I did not love the character of Dan. The story did take a turn for the better but it took half way through for me to be interested. When Dan made the conclusion of what needed to happen with his family I was ready for this moment! This story takes place in 2001 to 2002 time period. I think the book was a originally published at this time. Jane Green has one that takes place during the same time period which is better.
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Chauncey Mohr
> 3 dayDan Porter believes his life is near perfect as he has a wonderful job with a dot com firm, married to a loving wife for twenty years, and three precocious children. However, when his company hits bad times, the policy of last in first out leaves Dan unemployed. Meanwhile his wife Jackie is managing director of Rebecca Talworth Design Limited, but makes little money as profits are returned to the company. Dan fails to get a new job, which leads to a tear in his relationship with Jackie because she feels he has become complacent while their lifestyle slips. When he reads an article in Womens Weekly about a small Scottish firm Vagabonds needing help to expand, he races north while Jackie is on the continent on business. Though the makers of the popular Vaggas is not what Dan expected, he finds his life changes perhaps even more than when he lost his dot com job, but Jackies resentment grows. This is an engaging character study of a person who once was riding the crest, but since has lost his self esteem. He begins to regain his confidence with his trip to Scotland, but the cost may prove too high. The cast is a delightful ensemble, especially Dan, his family, and the Turnbows (owners of Vagabonds). Robin Pilcher provides a deep look at what really counts as Dan reassess his values and how he has lived. Harriet Klausner
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NorthStar
Greater than one weekRosamunde Pilcher is one of my favorite authors. Sadly, her son, Robin Pilcher, cannot pull off a writing coup such as his mothers immortal Shell Seekers or Winter Soltice, books guaranteed to give you a long, cozy read, full of well-crafted characters, meticulous descriptions and highly enjoyable narrative. Robin Pilchers work provides nothing but doom and gloom, with stiffly written characters, forced plot lines, inconclusive and feeble endings, and a boring storyline. I read this entire book because I kept hoping it would get better, but unfortunately it did not improve. I find Pilchers writing stilted and his characters shallow. His plot is obvious, the conclusion even more so. For more enjoyable reading, check out the wonderful writings of Rosamunde Pilcher, acclaimed British novelist.
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Bob Green
Greater than one weekI have never read a dreadful Pilcher book by either mother or son but some are better than others. Robin does not write as well as his mother but his books stand on their own. This is a nice read I would recommend to others. It is not the best of the bunch but I am glad I bought and read it.
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moderatelymoderate
> 3 dayI really enjoyed this book of second chances. First the father got reinvigorated by a change of scene, then the son and finally the daughters got to see that things other than material things mattered. And maybe Im mistaken, but I seem to recall reading the story of the young couple who bought the clothing business. Id appreciate any help locating it.
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L. Doyle
> 3 dayThis is my first Robin Pilcher book and I am not disappointed. I am a huge fan of his mother Rosamunde Pilcher so I decided to try one of his books. Very enjoyable. I was taken in by the characters immediately. Will get more of his books.
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E. A. Summers
> 3 dayLike others, I have read many Rosamunde Pilcher books and that certainly brought me to Robin Pilcher. But, no need to compare ... This is my second after An Ocean Apart and I loved both. I love the characters and the dogs!! The characters all have their stories as do we all and I enjoy that there is some background on all that comes through the telling of the main story. The thing that I think IS in common with both Pilchers writing is that even the characters that are bad have some likeable qualities and we are given enough info to have some understanding of their flaws. This book - like Oceans Apart - I was not ready for it to end. Oh, I also love the Scotland setting. And I guess the other commonality is that I will re-read these as I re-read Rosamundes books.
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Wendy
> 3 dayWell, I struggled through this one, putting it down several times for a week or more at a time. The biggest problem with this book? The characters engage in pages-long soliloquies in order to fill in the story. I know it worked for Shakespeare, but it just isnt working here. If I ever engaged in a conversation where the other person was giving me five-minute speeches like this I would go to sleep, or go hang myself. The next biggest problem? Very sterotypical & flat characters. The wife is your stereotypical angry witch-wife. The protagonist is your stereotypical good-guy-trying-to-deal-with-angry-witch-wife. No story or relationship is that simple. It would have been much more interesting to read if these main characters had been realistic, or had realistic interactions. Neither one of the main characters inspires your pity or your interest. What is interesting about reading about a dysfunctional family & crumbling marriage -- all of which is failing because of two completely selfish & self-serving people? They cant even be bothered to take proper care of their children. This sort of family tragedy is all too common & isnt appealing when it is glorified as just a life choice & portrayed so unrealistically in its affects on the people involved. I was also appalled that the character was so moved by the events of 9/11 that he felt inspired to abandon his marriage & family, and that this is portrayed as perfectly reasonable & good behavior--all while remaining extremely critical of his wife for doing the same thing. This book was hard to read because of its long, unrealistic character speeches, its unrealistic characters acting like stereotypes. And the ending is just disappointing & makes me feel a bit pessimistic about the whole human condition.
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Daniel Quentin Steele
> 3 dayRobin Pilcher is the son of a famous female novelist, but despite laboring under that burden, he seems to have developed into a good writer. I ve only read one of his books, but A Risk Worth Taking is a good novel about the fork in the road we can find ourselves in in middle age. Dan Porter is a victim of the Dot Com bubble bursting and taking his job and most of his money with it. So at age 50 he finds himself jobless, on the dole so to speak while his beautiful wife of 20 years, Jackie, keeps her upper crust job and has to become the supprt of the family. In a common scenario, Dan is blind to whats going on around him. He doesnt see Jackies increasing contempt for the failure whos lying around the house while she becomes the man of the house. He doesnt notice that she has no time for him anymore, no time or interest in sex and not much in their three children. She is just plain unhappy at home. She is happy only at work where she labors beside a good looking young man who has become her partner and emotional support, a young man who has wanted her for more than sex for years and is just biding his time until the cracks develop in her dying marriage. And then one day Dan sees a story in a magazine about a little company that is producing a wildly popular clothing line in the wilds of Scotland and decides to take a chance on buying it and revitalizing his life and his marriage. That falls through, but in the process of traveling to the North, he meets a dying man who runs a seafood business about which Dan knows absolutely nothing. But the owner likes Dan, sees a kindred spirit, and invites him to work for him for four months while hes short handed. Having not much better to do, he tells his wife hell be staying in Scotland for four months. Dans son joins him and develops an interest in and talent for the new business, as well as finding a new girlfriend. And for the first time, Dan has a chance to get to know his son and the kind of man he is becoming. While most readers can see whats coming, Pilcher does a good job of making the pieces come together into a picture of what Dans life could be, if he could persuade Jackie and their children to join him in the wilds of Scotland. Dan is an attractive and likeable character and the reader is rooting for him to make a new life, and for his eyes to be opened to who and what Jackie has become while he wasnt paying attention. I liked the book, but I only gave it four stars because it isnt the book it could have been, or should have been. This is an era when readers are supposed to like short, easily read novels. Pilcher develops a great linchpin character in Dan, and some other likeable characters like the owner who gives him a new chance at life. But nobody else really comes to life. Theyre sketchy characters designed to take up space around Dan. And, worst of all, Jackie is a cliched zero. She is THE BITCH. Thats basically her function. In a movie, viewers would hiss when she comes on screen. This is a woman who has been Dans partner in life for 20 years, the mother of his children. Dan loved her at one time.There must have been a reason. And he hasnt fought for her because he never even knew there was a fight to be waged. Im sure this happens a million times a day around the globe, but a story about two people who loved each needs to have SOME conflict. There needs to be even a hint of what the two of them had at one time. But its basically just ho hum. I lost my wife. Too bad. I think Ill go up to Scotland and see if I can find another woman. What Im saying, I guess in my long winded way, is that this is a good novel, with a very, very crappy ending.