Friday, February 2, 2024

Stranger to my Heart


    Louisa Adams, an older single woman, is up late reading one night when a knocks comes on her door. She opens it to see a petite, young, platinum blonde who says "Aunt Louise, I'm your niece Mary" before fainting. Louisa is confused as she has no niece and her name is not Louise but she is thrilled that some excitement has come into her life.

    She telephones her nephew Christopher who rushes over, bringing his doctor friend Ted Beach. Chris is instantly smitten with the girl but Ted, who is rapidly losing patients due to his judgmental prying into their lives, believes the girl is a runaway criminal or escaped mental patient and should be taken to the charity ward at the hospital.

    Louisa and Chris refuse and move the girl into the guest bedroom where she awakens. When questioned she says her name is Mary Halliday from New York and she is looking for her aunt Louise Adams.

    Louise is a kind and lonely neighbor of Louisa's but she is currently vacationing in Europe. Louisa insists Mary stay with her until her aunts return. Ted strongly disapproves and begins scouring newspapers for any notice of a missing girl while Louisa encourages a romance between Chris and Mary.

- This story was very cozy. I loved the setting of Louisa's apartment especially on a stormy night.

- There is a character named Marcia and she is Christopher's fiancé. I thought the author was quite cruel to her. She is described as being from "the wrong side of the tracks" and she does in fact come from a poor family who are rather content staying in poverty. Despite her working hard to get an education and better her life she is treated somewhat like a person who doesn't know their place and as tho she should be shoved back to the wrong side of the tracks when she crosses them. Not just because she comes from poverty but also because she is Italian. Throughout the book she is deceived by an older man, stolen from and blackmailed by her brother, and cheated on and ghosted by her fiancé. Her "happy ending" is that she goes to visit her mother for the weekend, a mother we are told mocked and ridiculed her for daring to go to school. 

- I enjoyed Louisa a lot. She's older, single, and very independent. She's also open minded, enjoys keeping up with her young nephew, is very kind, and loves mystery books. I think she is the type of character you can admire.

- I didn't like Chris, I thought he was a jerk and incompetent. He got mad at Marcia when she was open with him about her feelings that he was rushing their engagement and then cheats on her without a second thought.

I also didn't like Mary. I guess Louisa was really the only one I liked. Mary is overdramatic. She could have told her story from the start but instead she drags it out and answers questions with deep sighs and overly sad looks. She reminds me of the kids in junior high who thought being sad and moody made them look cool. She also causes a ton of problems for everyone, most strongly Marcia who she literally plots to steal Chris from and purposefully hurts Marcia to get in-between her and Chris. 

    Despite not liking the characters I actually did enjoy this book a lot. The cozy atmosphere and the low stakes plot made it a very relaxing read. 

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