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The house  Cover Image Book Book

The house

Steel, Danielle. (Author).

Summary: Perched on a hill overlooking San Francisco, the house was magnificent, built in 1923 by a wealthy man for the woman he adored. For her and for this house, he would spare no expense and overlook no detail, from the endless marble floors to the glittering chandeliers. Almost a century later, with the once-grand house now in disrepair, a young woman walks through its empty rooms. Sarah Anderson, a perfectly sensible estate lawyer, is about to do something utterly out of character. An elderly client has died and left her two gifts. One is a generous inheritance. The other, a priceless message: to use his money for something wonderful, something daring. And in this old house, surrounded by crumbling grandeur, Sarah knows just what it is. A respected attorney and self-described workaholic, Sarah had always lived life by the book. With a steady, if sputtering, relationship and a tiny apartment that has suited her just fine, Sarah cannot explain the force that draws her to the mansion and its history–to the story of a woman who once lived in the house, then mysteriously left it, to a child who grew up there, and a drama that unfolded in war-torn France…and to a history she never knew she had. Taking the biggest risk of her life, Sarah enlists the help of architect Jeff Parker, who shares Sarah’s passion for bringing the exquisite old house back to life. As she and Jeff work to restore the home’s every detail, as one relationship shatters and another begins, Sarah makes a series of powerful discoveries: about the true meaning of a dying man’s last gift…about the extraordinary legacies that are passed from generation to generation…and about a future she’s only just beginning to imagine

Record details

  • ISBN: 0440242037 (pbk.)
  • ISBN: 9780440242031 (pbk.)
  • Physical Description: 385, [16] p. ; 18 cm.
    print
  • Publisher: New York : Dell, [2007]

Content descriptions

General Note:
Includes excerpt from the author's Sisters (p. [391-401])
Subject: Women lawyers -- California -- San Francisco -- Fiction
Male-Female Friendship -- Fiction
Male-Female Romance -- Fiction
Secrets -- Fiction
Historic Houses -- Fiction
Restoration -- Fiction
Architects -- California -- San Francisco -- Fiction
Mansions -- California -- San Francisco -- Fiction
San Francisco (Calif.) -- Fiction
Genre: Love stories.

Available copies

  • 2 of 2 copies available at Sitka.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 0 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Shilo Community Library F STE (Text) 36772000197097 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Bridge River Branch AF STE (Text) 35180200057502 Paperbacks Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Monthly Selections - #1 August 2001
    In her fifty-third novel, Steel doesn't deviate from her standard formula, yet she still manages to tell a fairly compelling love story. Isabelle Forrester is the unhappy wife of a coldhearted and distant Parisian banker. She has spent the last 14 years of her life caring for her invalid son and being ignored by her wealthy, socially prominent husband. Unable to bear the strain of her lonely, unhappy life, Isabelle strikes up an innocent friendship--conversing mostly by phone or mail--with American Bill Robinson. A Washington power broker, Robinson is also trapped in an unhappy marriage. The pair's relationship intensifies steadily until they finally agree to meet in London for a few passionate days. There they are involved in a serious car accident, which leaves them both in a coma, fighting for their lives. It is during their long period of recovery that their personal lives unravel even further, until it seems they will never be together. This is a Danielle Steel novel, however, so ultimately everything works out for the best. Her fans devour her books as fast as she can write them, and wise librarians will stock up. ((Reviewed August 2001)) Copyright 2001 Booklist Reviews
  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2006 March #2
    Sarah Anderson, a beautiful, successful thirtysomething attorney, is having a midlife crisis. She's become a workaholic, spending 60- to 70-hour weeks at the office, and she is involved in an unhappy relationship with a man she only sees on weekends, who refuses to involve her in any other aspect of his life. She lives in a dumpy apartment, which contains the same furniture she used in college, and she has no outside interests other than the sometime boyfriend and her job. Everything changes, however, when an eccentric, elderly client of Sarah's dies and leaves her a small fortune and a message: to use the money for something wonderful, to live well, and to think about something other than work. Following this advice, Sarah purchases the dilapidated old mansion the client had lived in (after finding out that it was her own grandfather who originally built it), breaks up with the cheating boyfriend, and focuses all of her attention on rehabbing the old house. As she works to restore the place, she finds contentment in her new pastime; a nice, normal boyfriend in the architect who is helping her; and familial contentment as both her mother and grandmother find happiness in the purchase of this house. A typical Steel fairy tale. ((Reviewed March 15, 2006)) Copyright 2006 Booklist Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2001 August #2
    Another morbid melodrama from Steel (Journey, 2000, etc.), this one featuring a lonely wife who finds love in the arms of another man.Isabelle Forrester has stayed married to Gordon, her loathsome investment banker husband, for the sake of her children: selfish Sophie, now off to college, and Teddy, a frail 14-year-old afflicted with an unnamed degenerative disease that will probably kill him before he's 20. Isabelle has been utterly devoted to Teddy, and he to her, since his premature birth. She hovers over him, sharing love and laughter and tender moments, even wheeling him out now and then to catch a ray of sunshine in her beautiful Paris garden. Bright-eyed Teddy (a Tiny Tim clone and model of winsome pathos in every way) keeps her happy. And of late, she has a confidant: powerful DC political consultant Bill Robinson. He shares Isabelle's interest in art, and their transatlantic phone chats mean so very, very much to her. Since Bill is faithful to iceberg wife Cynthia and Isabelle doesn't even mentally cheat on nasty, controlling Gordon, what harm could there be? When Bill invites Isabelle to spend a few days in London with him, she says yes. They visit the Tate Gallery, dance at Annabel's, swap tearjerker stories-and then tragedy strikes! Their limo driver slams into a bus while he watches them kiss. Isabelle and Bill are pried out of the wreckage, gravely injured and comatose. Will Bill's subsequent paralysis make him less of a man in Isabelle's eyes? (No.) Once she recovers, will Gordon let her go? (Certainly not.) Will Cynthia divorce Bill? (Yes.) Will Teddy die nobly in a haze of golden light and platitudes and finally set his long-suffering mother free? Does a bear . . . read Danielle Steel novels?The latest in a long, long line.Copyright Kirkus 2001 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2005 November #1
    Workaholic lawyer Sarah receives an inheritance from a client, with instructions to use the money for something other than work. And, lo and behold, her plans to restore a beautiful 1923 mansion brings her in touch with committed architect Jeff Parker. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2001 June #2
    Ignored by her Parisian banker husband, the beautiful Isabelle indulges in a long-distance friendship via telephone with an American man. But of course all won't go well when they finally meet: at first kiss, their limo is totaled by a bus. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2001 August #3
    First kisses are often explosive, but not all are quite as disaster-ridden as the one that propels Steel's latest romance. Isabelle Forrester, elegant and refined wife of cold and indifferent Paris-based banker Gordon Forrester, has spent most of her marriage caring for her desperately ill teenage son, Teddy. Isolated in her Paris home, Isabelle's only comfort is her long-distance friendship with millionaire Washington power broker Bill Robinson, also stuck in an empty marriage. Isabelle and Bill, kindred spirits satisfied with their chaste relationship, agree to meet for a few platonic days in London. Following an enchanting evening on the town, they head back to their hotel in Bill's limousine. As the couple share their first, probing kiss, their car is struck by a speeding, double-decker bus. The horrendous crash kills many and leaves both Isabelle and Bill in critical condition. The long and arduous road to recovery is filled with both physical and emotional pain as Bill must make decisions about his crumbling marriage and the future of his career, and Isabelle must confront bitter truths about her husband. From adjoining hospital beds, they pledge their love to one another, but then Isabelle heads back to Paris to tend her ailing son, and Bill returns to the States for a stay at a rehabilitation center where he hopes to regain use of his legs. Will Isabelle eventually leave her husband and reclaim her freedom? Will Bill ever walk again? Will the two soul mates ever be reunited? Despite the wacky unlikeliness of the bus-crash plot device and the his-and-her IVs, Steel pulls through with skillful plotting, steeping a gentle brew that will once again gratify her legions of fans. (Oct. 30) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
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