Witty, cleverly constructed and including a truly surprising twist, Someone Else’s Love Story turns out to be a nuanced exploration of faith, family and the things we do for love.” — People (3 ½ stars)
“Witty and insightful...a novel at once funny and touching.” — Publishers Weekly
“An inspiring story of love, faith and redemption...All of the characters... are so vividly drawn, they fairly leap off the page.” — Booklist on SOMEONE ELSE'S LOVE STORY
“That rare woman’s novel that is sure to please readers of popular fiction as well as literary fiction. A terrific pageturner!” — Susan Elizabeth Phillips, New York Times bestselling author of THE GREAT ESCAPE
“Someone Else’s Love Story is worth reading, even studying. Expressions of love come in many forms, as Jackson shows.” — Omaha World-Herald
“Finely drawn characters make the miraculous plausible, from the opening hostage scene in a North Georgia convenience store to an ending that hits the mark of ‘surprising yet inevitable’ mastered and articulated by Flannery O’Connor.” — Atlanta Magazine
“A surprising novel, both graceful and tender. You won’t be able to put it down.” — Dallas Morning News on SOMEONE ELSE'S LOVE STORY
“ Someone Else’s Love Story is never predictable, full of humor and heart and characters you can’t help but love.” — Greenville News
“[T]here is love at [this novel’s] heart… there is much to gain from a closer read.” (3 out of 4 stars) — USA Today
“Joshilyn Jackson is a brilliant storyteller and has a unique gift of bringing quirkiness to her characters and a lot of twists and turns to her tale.” — Wichita Falls Times Record Review
“There are scenes that will make you gasp, pause or even tear up as Jackson’s characters fumble toward imperfect enlightenment. Someone Else’s Love Story will delight and surprise with its unexpected compassion, empathy and humanity.” — BookPage
“This charming page-turner serves up a twist I never remotely expected, followed by an utterly satisfying conclusion.” — Bookreporter.com
Finely drawn characters make the miraculous plausible, from the opening hostage scene in a North Georgia convenience store to an ending that hits the mark of ‘surprising yet inevitable’ mastered and articulated by Flannery O’Connor.
Someone Else’s Love Story is never predictable, full of humor and heart and characters you can’t help but love.
A surprising novel, both graceful and tender. You won’t be able to put it down.
Dallas Morning News on SOMEONE ELSE'S LOVE STORY
An inspiring story of love, faith and redemption...All of the characters... are so vividly drawn, they fairly leap off the page.
Booklist on SOMEONE ELSE'S LOVE STORY
Someone Else’s Love Story is worth reading, even studying. Expressions of love come in many forms, as Jackson shows.
Joshilyn Jackson is a brilliant storyteller and has a unique gift of bringing quirkiness to her characters and a lot of twists and turns to her tale.
Wichita Falls Times Record Review
That rare woman’s novel that is sure to please readers of popular fiction as well as literary fiction. A terrific pageturner!
[T]here is love at [this novel’s] heart… there is much to gain from a closer read.” (3 out of 4 stars)
Witty, cleverly constructed and including a truly surprising twist, Someone Else’s Love Story turns out to be a nuanced exploration of faith, family and the things we do for love.
[T]here is love at [this novel’s] heart… there is much to gain from a closer read.” (3 out of 4 stars)
There are scenes that will make you gasp, pause or even tear up as Jackson’s characters fumble toward imperfect enlightenment. Someone Else’s Love Story will delight and surprise with its unexpected compassion, empathy and humanity.
This charming page-turner serves up a twist I never remotely expected, followed by an utterly satisfying conclusion.
Witty, cleverly constructed and including a truly surprising twist, Someone Else’s Love Story turns out to be a nuanced exploration of faith, family and the things we do for love.
10/07/2013 Friendships and relationships are tested by tragedy in this witty and insightful sixth novel from the author of Gods in Alabama and A Grown-up Kind of Pretty. Single mother Shandi Pierce is paralyzed with fear when she and her young son Natty are caught in the crossfire of a convenience store stickup gone bad. That is, until the dashing William Ashe steps between Natty and the gunman. Smitten by her erstwhile savior, Shandi buddies up to William, hoping their friendship can become more, but is stymied by complications in the form of Shandi’s disapproving best friend Walcott, William’s cohort Paula, Shandi’s ever-feuding divorced parents, and William’s own heartbreaking and as-yet unresolved past. With a deft wit and a series of stellar twists, Jackson creates a conventional love story that is also something more: an exploration of what draws people together, and pushes them apart; a commentary on faith’s ability to unite or divide; and a reminder that “death brushing past makes people hungry to connect to other people.” What emerges is a novel at once funny and touching, whose characters’ many flaws are overshadowed by all the ways in which they look out for one another. The final denouement of Jackson’s roller-coaster love story will leave the reader both thoroughly sated and hungry for more. (Dec.)
The lives of Shandi and William intersect during a convenience store robbery and its subsequent revelations. Author Joshilyn Jackson’s voice delivers the protagonists’ heartbreaking pasts with delicate sensitivity. Shandi, a struggling college student, must cope with her gifted 3-year-old son, Natty, while William, a brilliant geneticist, struggles to reconcile faith and science in the loss of his wife and daughter. Jackson’s innocent tone of wonder keeps the story from descending into unremitting melancholy. Her voice for Natty is delightful while Shandi’s drawl is equally pleasant to hear. She captures William’s Asperger’s in an authentic way with a slightly stiff yet warm voice. Enlivening flashbacks as well as Jackson’s careful pacing and voicings will keep listeners engaged. C.A. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2013, Portland, Maine
DECEMBER 2013 - AudioFile
The lives of Shandi and William intersect during a convenience store robbery and its subsequent revelations. Author Joshilyn Jackson’s voice delivers the protagonists’ heartbreaking pasts with delicate sensitivity. Shandi, a struggling college student, must cope with her gifted 3-year-old son, Natty, while William, a brilliant geneticist, struggles to reconcile faith and science in the loss of his wife and daughter. Jackson’s innocent tone of wonder keeps the story from descending into unremitting melancholy. Her voice for Natty is delightful while Shandi’s drawl is equally pleasant to hear. She captures William’s Asperger’s in an authentic way with a slightly stiff yet warm voice. Enlivening flashbacks as well as Jackson’s careful pacing and voicings will keep listeners engaged. C.A. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2013, Portland, Maine
DECEMBER 2013 - AudioFile
Jackson's novel perfectly captures the flavor and rhythm of Southern life as a young woman preparing for college finds herself caught up in a real-life drama. Shandi has a miracle baby. His name is Nathan, but she and her BFF, Walcott, call the precocious 3-year-old genius Natty. As Shandi moves out of her mother's home to her successful physician father's condominium in Atlanta, she, Walcott and Natty become caught up in an armed robbery. It's during this robbery that Shandi meets William Ashe, a giant of a man with a palpable, lingering sorrow. When William takes a bullet during the robbery, Shandi decides to take on William and starts caring for him on the day he leaves the hospital. In due course, she discovers that William's suffered a tragic loss and finds herself fighting both his memories of happier times and his best friend, Paula, who makes it clear she wants Shandi out of the picture. However, Shandi is coping with a dilemma she thinks William can help her resolve: discovering the identity of the man who fathered her child. Shandi conceived Natty after being raped at a college party years before and still has enough of his DNA to possibly deduce his identity. William, a research scientist, has both the tools and the know-how to narrow down, if not figure out, just who her attacker might be. Jackson draws on her own Southern roots to paint this pitch-perfect portrait of a girl from a small town in Georgia. She traces Shandi's struggles to figure out what, if anything, William really means to her. Wrapped in a thoughtful, often funny and insightful narrative that brings Shandi and those in her satellite to life, Jackson presents the reader with a story that is never predictable and is awash in bittersweet love, regret and the promise of what could be. A surprising novel, both graceful and tender. You won't be able to put it down.