Maria Worley's personal life has become difficult since her divorce, because her ex obviously thinks he divorced his son along with her. Now their teenage son is playing up – is it a ploy to get them back together? How come a therapist who spends her days solving other people's problems can't sort out one teenager? What about Ryan, the grieving sniper who's in danger of losing his edge but who won't let her help him? When he insists on meeting her outside the office, things get personal, but she's not supposed to get involved with a patient. Is her heart trying to tell her she'd be better off being his friend than his therapist? Could he possibly be an answer to her son's prayers?
I found this the most emotionally intense of the trilogy, a lovely conclusion. I felt like strangling her friend Jackson, but then I'm Irish and we have very little use for therapists, especially given that they basically charge you a fortune to find your answers yourself. I would have liked an epi of Ryan, Maria and family ten years on. I liked the way that Maria didn't give in to her teenager, despite the temptation. Christopher's unhappiness at realising his actions had consequences makes me think of my own two, who don't like it when I keep my word about punishments (though mine are much younger).
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I think i have one of her
I think i have one of her Supers.
Do you check pages of your blog for more comments, esp. given how man books you are blogging. I would hope you check more than the first page. I wish I could see more entries on people's blogs just because it can be so asy to get behind reading blogs and even though i might read several pages of a persons blog at once, I wonder if anyone checks older entries..
AKA Merri
Family Challenge Team: The Spine Breakers with my dh Glenn AKA Phaedrus
Yes Merri - once a week I go back checking via the recent
posts and via the blog to make sure I pick up on comments even on older entries
Hugs
Sadhbh
Dream Team 2008 Challenge blogs