On Mystic Lake: A Novel
On Mystic Lake: A Novel book cover

On Mystic Lake: A Novel

Mass Market Paperback – April 4, 2000

Price
$8.99
Publisher
Ballantine Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0449149676
Dimensions
4.17 x 1 x 6.85 inches
Weight
7 ounces

Description

“A beautifully simple, deeply compassionate story.” —Diana Gabaldon “Marvelous . . . a touching love story . . . You know a book is a winner when you devour it in one evening and hope there’s a sequel. . . . This page-turner has enough twists and turns to keep the reader up until the wee hours of the morning.” — USA Today “Superb . . . I’ll heartily recommend On Mystic Lake to any woman . . . who demands that a story leave her in a satisfied glow.” — The Washington Post Book World “A luminescent story . . . Kristin Hannah touches the deepest, most tender corners of our hearts.” —Tami Hoag “Excellent . . . On Mystic Lake is an emotional experience you won’t soon forget.” — Rocky Mountain News “Propels readers forward to the final chapter.” — The Seattle Times From the Inside Flap Annie Colewater's life fell apart the day her eighteen-year-old daughter left home and her husband of twenty years abandoned her for a younger woman. Shattered, she returns home to the small Washington town of Mystic, seeking solace to the haunting emptiness of her own soul. Here, a broken woman will open her heart to a shattered little girl and her father, Nick Delacroix, an embittered, grieving widower. These three lost hearts find the courage to trust in love again--never expecting the turn of events that will force Annie to make a harrowing choice between what is . . . and what could be. Annie Colwater's life fell apart the day her eighteen-year-old daughter left home and her husband of twenty years abandoned her for a younger woman. Shattered, she returns home to the small Washington town of Mystic, seeking solace to the haunting emptiness of her own soul. Here, a broken woman will open her heart to a shattered little girl and her father, Nick Delacroix, an embittered, grieving widower. These three lost hearts find the courage to trust in love again -- never expecting the turn of events that will force Annie to make a harrowing choice between what is... and what could be. Kristin Hannah is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of many acclaimed novels, including The Great Alone, The Nightingale, and Firefly Lane . She and her husband live in the Pacific Northwest. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Rain fell like tiny silver teardrops from the tired sky. Somewhere behind a bank of clouds lay the sun, too weak to cast a shadow on the ground below.It was March, the doldrums of the year, still and quiet and gray, but the wind had already begun to warm, bringing with it the promise of spring. Trees that only last week had been naked and brittle seemed to have grown six inches over the span of a single, moonless night, and sometimes, if the sunlight hit a limb just so, you could see the red bud of new life stirring at the tips of the crackly brown bark. Any day, the hills behind Malibu would blossom, and for a few short weeks this would be the prettiest place on Earth.Like the plants and animals, the children of Southern California sensed the coming of the sun. They had begun to dream of ice cream and Popsicles and last year's cutoffs. Even determined city dwellers, who lived in glass and concrete high-rises in places with pretentious names like Century City, found themselves veering into the nursery aisles of their local supermarkets. Small, potted geraniums began appearing in the metal shopping carts, alongside the sun-dried tomatoes and the bottles of Evian water.For nineteen years, Annie Colwater had awaited spring with the breathless anticipation of a young girl at her first dance. She ordered bulbs from distant lands and shopped for hand-painted ceramic pots to hold her favorite annuals. But now, all she felt was dread, and a vague, formless panic. After today, nothing in her well-ordered life would remain the same, and she was not a woman who liked the sharp, jagged edges of change. She preferred things to run smoothly, down the middle of the road. That was where she felt safest--in the center of the ordinary, with her family gathered close around her.Wife.Mother.These were the roles that defined her, that gave her life meaning. It was what she'd always been, and now, as she warily approached her fortieth birthday, it was all she could remember ever wanting to be. She had gotten married right after college and been pregnant within that same year. Her husband and daughter were her anchors; without Blake and Natalie, she had often thought that she might float out to sea, a ship without captain or destination. But what did a mother do when her only child left home? Read more

Features & Highlights

  • NATIONAL BESTSELLER • A poignant and tender story of love, loss, passion, and the fragile threads that bind families together from the #1
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author of
  • The Nightingale
  • “A beautifully simple, deeply compassionate story.”—Diana Gabaldon
  • Annie Colwater's only child has just left home for school abroad. On that same day, her husband of twenty years confesses that he's in love with a younger woman. Alone in the house that is no longer a home, Annie comes to the painful realization that for years she has been slowly disappearing. Lonely and afraid, she retreats to Mystic, the small Washington town where she grew up, hoping that there she can reclaim the woman she once was—the woman she is now desperate to become again.In Mystic, she is reunited with her first love, Nick Delacroix, a recent widower unable to cope with his grieving, too-silent six-year-old daughter, Izzie. Together, the three of them begin to heal, and, at last, Annie learns that she can love without losing herself. But just when she has found a second chance at happiness, her life is turned upside down again, and Annie must make a choice no woman should have to make. . . .
  • Praise for
  • On Mystic Lake
  • “Marvelous . . . a touching love story . . . You know a book is a winner when you devour it in one evening and hope there’s a sequel. . . . This page-turner has enough twists and turns to keep the reader up until the wee hours of the morning.”
  • USA Today
  • “Superb . . . I’ll heartily recommend
  • On Mystic Lake
  • to any woman . . . who demands that a story leave her in a satisfied glow.”
  • The Washington Post Book World
  • “A luminescent story . . . Kristin Hannah touches the deepest, most tender corners of our hearts.”
  • —Tami Hoag
  • “Excellent . . .
  • On Mystic Lake
  • is an emotional experience you won’t soon forget.”
  • Rocky Mountain News
  • “Propels readers forward to the final chapter.”
  • The Seattle Times

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(2.4K)
★★★★
25%
(2K)
★★★
15%
(1.2K)
★★
7%
(553)
23%
(1.8K)

Most Helpful Reviews

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What a Story!

Kristin Hannah has done it again. She is a master of taking the reader to beautiful places with interesting and often complex characters. Annie returns home to Mystic Lake after her husband of 20 years tells her that he wants a divorce because he's in love with another woman. Annie is a nurturer and is always there to take care of others, but in the meantime she has lost herself. During her stay in Mystic Lake she comes to know true love, finds out about herself, and helps a little girl who has lost her mommy understand that "it's going to be okay." The little girl, Izzy, will capture your heart and make you laugh and cry. Hannah keeps you waiting until the bitter end...the last few pages...to see how things tie up and if the ending will be happy. This book will not disappoint you.
38 people found this helpful
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Absolutely terrific!

You don't know what you're missing if you've never read a book by Kristin Hannah, and _On Mystic Lake_ is one of the absolute best books ever written. The characters come alive and endear themselves to your heart. Annie is down to earth and easy to read about. Izzie, the little girl who needs to find her way into the world again is precious and Nick is the type of character whom you wish you could jump into the book and give a hug to. _On Mystic Lake_ is by no means "lite reading". The main character, Annie, is getting a divorce from her husband who claims to love another woman. Trying to come to grips with her failing marriage, Annie returns home to Mystic to spend some time with her father. There she meets up with her first love, Nick, who chose her best friend over her, breaking Annie's heart. It turns out that Nick's wife (Annie's old best friend) has died leaving Nick and his daughter Izzie devestated. When the three first get together, it's sort of like the blind leading the blind. They are all so hurt that it is hard to see who needs more help. But, Annie brings healing to Izzie's soul, the little girl mends Annie's heart, and a love rekindles between Nick and Annie. Still, things are not that easy, and a conflict makes the world harder in Mystic. Kristin Hannah is an amazingly gifted author and her talent shines in _On Mystic Lake_. Her descriptive writing will take you to another place- a little logging town in Washington where mist floats above the ground and life moves at a slower pace. This is a beautiful book about three healing souls who learn that bad things do happen but you can get around them. I'd recomend _On Mystic Lake_ to anyone who enjoys putting down a book with a sense that the world is a wonderful place and they can do something to make it better.
28 people found this helpful
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Poorly-researched, throwback to another age--a triumph?

I truly looked forward to reading this book, my first Kristin Hannah and one that has received rave reviews. On Mystic Lake is the story of a woman who, cruelly abandoned by her husband, goes back to her home town to "find herself." The premise was great, but my disappointment in the story grew as I read page after page.
From the beginning, I was frustrated with the heroine, Annie. How could she be so clueless about her husband? Didn't she have any sort of life for herself, outside of her daughter and picking up her husband's dry cleaning? As a stay-at-home mom myself, I found her doormat attitude about life downright insulting. What on earth did she do with herself day after day, while they were away at work and school? She seemed child-like in her isolation, her lack of interests, her total definition of herself as a wife and a mother.
I hung on, through the untrue depictions of Malibu and LA, through the flowery, almost purple descriptions of Mystic, hoping she would figure out who she was... well, it turns out, she is a "wife" and a "mother"! She finds an old beau on the skids and his troubled daughter, and so becomes his surrogate wife and dear little Izzy's new and improved mother. We are supposed to cheer for her, because she helps frightened Izzy and tortured Nick become better people, and she feels good about it. But do we really learn anything new about her? Does she learn anything new about herself, beyond her sex drive? I don't see it. She has vague plans about opening a bookstore. Once, she wanted to be a writer, but that idea is also taken nowhere. She blames this on her father, who never taught her to have goals of her own.
The final straw, for me, was the arrival of her pre-term daughter. Anyone who has spent any time in a modern NICU will roll their eyes at the inaccuracies. A five-pounder in mortal danger? Not these days. Annie's rivers of tears are downright annoying to anyone who has seen the brave, stoic parents of those babies truly at risk. Annie would not have been allowed to wring her hands at her daughter's side for days on end, and the instantaneous nursing scene was almost laughingly unrealistic. In retrospect, I would say this plot turn was egregiously manipulative, designed for everyone to get out their hankies one more time.
While Annie is a truly noble person, who is a fabulous mother and certainly an attentive, efficient wife, I did not find her heroine material because I did not see new dimensions of her personality revealed, I did not see her moving in new directions. And, frankly, I felt insulted by inaccuracies of detail and a plot obviously designed to wring the heartstrings as effectively as a Hallmark commercial. I like Hallmark commercials; but I was expecting more.
25 people found this helpful
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An absolutely beautiful love story

On 11/11, I endured the funeral of a very dear friend. As I approached the church, I noticed the sun breaking through the clouds, beaming down rays of light to shine down on the building where she lay inside, awaiting the eulogy to be given for her final goodbye. I thought my heart would break and I would never stop crying, even though I finally did. After the funeral, I stopped by my favorite bookstore and purchased four novels, two of which were written by Kristin Hannah. That evening, I made the mistake of starting to read ON MYSTIC LAKE. Because my eyelids were still swollen from the many tears I'd cried at the funeral and during the day, and my eyeballs felt like sandpaper was swiping over them every time I blinked, I thought it best to put the book down and finish reading it later. The next morning I found myself picking the novel up again. After I started to read. I couldn't stop until I'd read the rest of story, nor did I stop crying. I have to believe that Kristin Hannah has the finest talent to write the sweetest of love stories that I've ever had the pleasure to read in this novel. I have another one of her novels, but I don't dare start it right away. I need a break from the tears. KH had no trouble from the very beginning to capture of my attention. I felt every moment of Annie's heartache, as the description of the author's plot and characters was most excellent. If you want a genuine, heartfelt/heartbreaking/happy-ending love story, do this one. Just make sure you have a box of Kleen-x sitting close by. You'll need it.
11 people found this helpful
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OK, with a few "good" moments

I expected a lot more from this book and have to say I was disappointed. There was nothing "bad" about the book-it was a quick, easy and nice read...but not memorable. The plotlines were predictable and the characters did not have much depth (particularly the father, Hank). I found the writing mediocre most of the time.
There were a few great moments, more at the end of the book than the beginning. I knew how it was going to end, but didn't really care.
There are much better books out there!
7 people found this helpful
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Wonderful!!!

This is my first book by Kristin Hannah. I'm not sure why I read this book, it's not my norm, but boy am I glad I did. This book was so engrossing I found myself reading it every chance I got. The characters were so vivid I felt like I knew them all.
5 people found this helpful
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A good start but this books loses its way ...

I quickly became engrossed in this book and felt a lot of empathy for Annie's plight when her husband decides to leave her. However as the book progressed it became apparent that it would never amount to more than a sickly sweet romance and that most of the characters - apart from the heroine and a few others - would be cardboard cutouts. At the point when she pops into Lurlene's salon for a makeover I got that sinking feeling that I didn't want to meet another stereotypical American character and felt that I could accurately predict Lurlene's behaviour and dialogue in advance - and how right I was!
The book is full of this kind of sloppy writing, which in the long run completely destroys its credibility. How convenient for Nick that Annie turns up when she does and takes over the parenting role that he has neglected, considering that (at this point of the story) he is neither a lover or a relative just an old friend. There is also no mention of whether Annie is paid for caring for Izzie (though I would guess that she doesn't need the money anyway). Personally if I had spent years caring for a man and a child only to be cast aside I don't think I would be so keen to rush into the same situation again.
I'm not saying this novel doesn't have its good points - certainly the relationship between Annie and Izzie is very touchingly portrayed but it is certainly not what the blurb on the jacket promised. It is certainly not about a woman 'finding herself' or finding any form of enlightment it is simply about a woman who exchanges a unsatisfactory relationship with a man who doesn't love her for a better relationship with a man who does - (a stock plot for romanctic novels) but apart from that does not change her essential role in life (a dogsbody) in any way at all.
5 people found this helpful
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Height of sappiness...

I tried but only made it halfway.
2 people found this helpful
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MARVELOUS

If you have necer read a book by her and like Lavryle Spencer please do yourself a favor and read this, or any of her others. I have just recently started reading her work and I am devouring every one of her books I can get my hands on. Her insight into her characters emotions is insightful. They are so real, so you want to remember them forever. So let's get together again sometime kind of people. I cannot praise this book enough. Some authors are like that, I don't bother to read the backs anymore I just buy the new ones when they come out. Like Sandra Brown and Judith McNaught Kristin Hannah never fails to take you somewhere else and make you wish you could just stay there.
2 people found this helpful
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Learning to start over

Annie has defined herself as a wife and mother. So when her daughter leaves home for a stay in England and her husband tells her that he's in love with someone else, Annie drifts back to her childhood town, Mystic, where she hopes to re-evaluate herself.
Whilst she is there she meets up with Nick Delacroix, a schoolfriend and old flame, who married her best friend. Nick has also had hard times, his wife committed suicide and his daughter Izzy is so traumatised that she has stopped talking. For the first time Annie feels like she can help, and revels in the way she feels useful. She even begins to feel love again, and how it feels to be loved.
Unfortunately the past has a way of rearing its head, and when she discovers that she is pregnant to her husband and he wants her back, she feels that she has no other choice but to return and try to hold on to her marriage. But on her terms. She will no longer be the pushover wife who just accepts that her role is to please her husband. Will those terms be acceptable? It takes some words of wisdom from her daughter to realise who she should be pleasing.
1 people found this helpful