For me, just okay, but for those who loved reading "Pay it Forward", you won't be disappointed.
WOW I dint think Hyde could write a better novel than Pay it forward--this is equally as touching and great
"Forever love" is a powerful statement that sums the tale of this novel. The story is so sad at times, comfortingly humorous at others, and warming to the heart at others. I really enjoyed this read. The child who has no last name and who doesn't know who he is is an innocent who loves sincerely and without restraint. Mitch becomes his father by default when Leonard's mother disappears. He finds himself growing increasingly attached to the boy whose eye problems stem from being born prematurely and become more serious as he grows. Mitch learns to be a father through experience guided by the love of a small boy who grows under his tutelage into a sensitive teenager and later, a man with a family of his own.
A very beautiful book - with a moving message and characters that you actually grow to care about as you read. Pearl is maybe the weakest character of all, and that is saying something as you end up feeling her fear and pain as you read.
Pearl, a young single mother, commits an accidental crime and does her best to protect her son Leonard from the incident. One day, she leaves Leonard with her next-door neighbor, a young computer programmer named Mitch, and never returns. Leonard is put into foster care but Mitch remains a central figure in his life and Leonard, a gentle soul with vision problems, teaches Mitch and everyone around him how to "love in the present tense" as he comes to terms with his mother's abandonment. Beautifully written and engrossing to read, I highly recommend it to anyone.
This was a wonderful and heat warming book. Dont let the first few pages fool you - you will not want to put this book done once you get into it.
Enjoyable book about love and relationships. A young girl becomes a mother; a neighbor befriends the young child; the child's enduring love is the center theme. Book made me cry both for sad and happy reasons. Style jumped back and forth between present and past . . . each chapter headed by the character whose perspective it is along with the age of the character at the time. Definitely worth reading.