Beth Gutcheon Saying Grace Domestic Pleasures Still Missing The New Girls  
  
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Good-bye and Amen Beth Gutcheon
In a summer cottage on the coast of Maine, an unlikely love was nurtured, a marriage endured, and a family survived. Now it is time for the children of that marriage to make peace with the wounds and the treasures left to them. And to sort out which is which.
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On sale August 2008

Leeway Cottage Beth Gutcheon
In this beautifully written tour de force of a novel, Beth Gutcheon takes readers back to the coastal village of Dundee, Maine. There, in a Victorian summer house called Leeway Cottage, we witness the scenes of a long 20th century marriage.
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More Than You Know
This spare, piercing, and unforgettable novel bridges two centuries and two intense love stories as Hannah and Conary's fate is interwoven with the tale of a marriage that took place in Dundee a hundred years earlier. Hannah says, "I don't suppose you have to believe in ghosts to know that we are all haunted, all of us, by things we can see and feel and guess at, and many more things that we can't." But she knows that ghosts are utterly real, as well as metaphoric, and is haunted by the sense that if she could have learned who this ghost was, and what it wanted, she might have made a difference.
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Five Fortunes
In Beth Gutcheon's richly-plotted new novel, Five Fortunes (Cliff Street Books/HarperCollins; May 1, 1998: $24.00), the lives of five likable but very different women become inextricably linked after they meet at a luxurious Arizona health spa. The friendships forged during a week at The Cloisters, nourished by the shared adventure of food deprivation and rigorous exercise, will prove instrumental in changing each woman's life in ways she could never have imagined.
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Saying Grace
A powerfully moving novel about Rue Shaw, a woman who has everything worth having--a much loved daughter, a solid marriage, and a job she loves-- plus one great failing....

"Saying Grace is by turns heartwarming and heartbreaking." - Boston Globe
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Domestic Pleasures
In Jane Austen's villages, there were two kinds of manners: good and bad. Domestic Pleasures is a novel of manners set in a city comprised of many villages, each with its own manners and values: modern day New York. It is also a love story.

"She's one of those few novelists who writers truthfully about everything life offers" - Susan Isaacs - author of Shining Through
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Still Missing
Alex Selky, going on seven, kissed his mother goodbye and set off for school, a mere two blocks away. He never made it.

"Haunting, harrowing, and highly effective...a stunning shocker of an ending....It strings out the suspense to the almost unendurable."

-Publishers Weekly-
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The New Girls
The New Girls is a resonant, engrossing novel about five girls during their formative prep-school years in the tumultuous mid-sixties.

"It's funny without sacrificing intelligence, intelligent without being pretentious. lt's all-around good reading."

- Boston Globe -
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