The Whittiers: A Novel
The Whittiers: A Novel book cover

The Whittiers: A Novel

Hardcover – November 22, 2022

Price
$16.92
Format
Hardcover
Pages
272
Publisher
Delacorte Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1984821836
Dimensions
6.35 x 1 x 9.4 inches
Weight
1.2 pounds

Description

Danielle Steel has been hailed as one of the world’s bestselling authors, with almost a billion copies of her novels sold. Her many international bestsellers include Complications, Nine Lives, Finding Ashley, The Affair, Neighbors, and other highly acclaimed novels. She is also the author of His Bright Light, the story of her son Nick Traina’s life and death; A Gift of Hope, a memoir of her work with the homeless; Expect a Miracle, a book of her favorite quotations for inspiration and comfort; Pure Joy, about the dogs she and her family have loved; and the children’s books Pretty Minnie in Paris and Pretty Minnie in Hollywood. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 Three weeks after Christmas every year, Preston and Constance Whittier left their home in New York and took a vacation. When the children were younger, their beloved German housekeeper, Frieda, and one of a revolving door of nannies would take care of their six children. They would come home energized and refreshed after a romantic two- or three-xadweek interlude alone. They both loved to ski, and a favorite spot for their holiday was one of the Three Valleys in the French Alps. They went to Courchevel, Val-xadd’Isère, or Megève in France, Zermatt and Saint Moritz in Switzerland. Occasionally they skied in Aspen or Vail in Colorado, but with their kids grown, they preferred to take their annual child-xadfree vacation in Europe rather than in the States.They often took the children skiing with them when they went to Aspen, during their winter break from school. Their ski trips in Europe were a special treat for Connie and Preston. They usually ended the trip with a weekend in Paris or London before heading back to New York to resume their family life. As the children got older, they teased their parents about the trip, and called it their Wintermoon.They all summered on Shelter Island, in a big family house they had eventually sold, when the children stopped spending summers with them and the house had become more of a burden than a joy. Connie and Preston had begun to streamline their life in recent years, cutting down on unnecessary expenses, and avoiding projects that were too much work for them. In the summers, they rented a house in Maine now, or in the Hamptons, or on Cape Cod, large enough so that the children who wanted to could come and go for a few days or a weekend visit. Renting was easier than owning, and the headache of maintaining a summer home was someone else’s problem, not theirs. The children never came at the same time, so they didn’t need an enormous house. Preston and Connie still clung to the tradition of their Wintermoon, which they called it now, too. It was important to them, and they looked forward to it all year. After forty-xadthree years of marriage, it still felt like a honeymoon to them. Constance was sixty-xadfive years old and the time had flown. She couldn’t believe how old her children were, all adults now. Even their “baby” Annabelle, a late surprise, had just turned twenty-xadone.Their oldest, Lyle, was forty-xadtwo, married, with two children of his own, a son and daughter, Tommy, ten, and Devon, seven. His wife, Amanda, had been a disappointment to them all. Lyle had been enjoying his bachelorhood and burgeoning career in land development and commercial real estate ten years ago when the girl he was dating none too seriously had gotten pregnant and he had married her. She had never warmed to his family, nor they to her. She was socially ambitious. Constance thought her greedy, although Preston’s attitude was more charitable. She was bright and lively and fun and sexy, and knew how to turn the charm on for Lyle, but within a short time after they married, Connie didn’t think Lyle looked happy. But Lyle never complained. He was loyal to a fault and wanted to make the marriage work once he’d agreed to marry Amanda.Amanda never worked after they were married. She had strong desires for expensive things, made heavy demands of him, and gave little in exchange, in Connie’s opinion, but Connie loved her grandchildren, and enjoyed spending time with them. Both Annabelle, now twenty-xadone, and Benjie, twenty-xadeight, Preston and Connie’s two youngest children, still lived at home with them. Connie loved having the last of her children still near at hand. Their other children, all on determined career paths, had moved out years before. Gloria, next after Lyle, had a big job on Wall Street in finance, and was generous with business advice to her brothers and sisters, whether they asked for it or not. She had bought an apartment on the Upper West Side, which she loved. She visited her parents’ home often, but was happiest living alone, even now at thirty-xadnine.The twins, Caroline and Charlie, had bought an apartment together in SoHo. At thirty-xadthree, they worked brutally hard on their steadily growing fashion brand of women’s clothes. They spent every waking hour working, and had transformed a loft in an old warehouse into a living space they loved. Inseparable as children and growing up, they had opted to live and build a business together as adults. It worked well for both of them.Lyle was the only one of the six siblings who was married. Gloria, Charlie, and Caroline were busy with their careers and there was no hint of marriage on the horizon or even serious romantic relationships for any of them in their fast-xadmoving worlds. Benjie needed his parents’ help, and at twenty-xadone, Annabelle was still too young for marriage, and had no interest in it. But she was eager to have an apartment of her own, and was in negotiation with her parents to allow her to get one. Independence from parental supervision was her only current goal. She had recently dropped out of college, which her parents weren’t pleased about, and moved back in with them. This had stalled her ability to convince them that more freedom was what she needed most now. So the prospect of moving to her own apartment was currently on hold. And Benjie was delighted to have her back at home with him.Connie and Preston had met for the first time at her debut in New York, when she was presented to society, in an antiquated social rite her family still clung to. Preston was ten years older and didn’t pay attention to her. She was just one of twenty-xadfive eighteen-xadyear-xadold girls in pretty white dresses who curtsied to the assembled company and had escorts their own age. They met again at Connie’s first job, after she’d graduated from Vassar. She was a junior editor at a publishing house, where Preston was already a respected senior editor. He noticed her immediately and found her intelligent and beautiful. They married the following summer and started their family immediately.Connie gave up her job to raise the children they planned to have. Eventually Preston became the publisher, and held the job for the rest of his career. Now seventy-xadfive, he had been retired for ten years. They loved having more time to spend together. He had enjoyed a distinguished career, and they had similar interests. They never tired of being together, and there was still a spark of romance between them, which grew into a steady blaze during their Wintermoons in Europe.They came from similar backgrounds. Preston’s family had had a great fortune from steel and copper at the turn of the twentieth century. The Crash of ’29 had taken a heavy toll, as had time, but hadn’t wiped them out entirely, as it had others. The family just had less than before, and had to live more carefully. But neither Preston nor Connie had a taste for luxury. Although Preston’s fortune had diminished over the years, they had enough money to live well. Preston had made wise investments, and he made a respectable salary. They could comfortably afford their six children, and a solid, stable lifestyle, without extravagance. While their children had been well educated and would inherit a modest amount one day, they would never be “rich” as his family had once been. The value of the house and Preston’s investments made them vulnerable to estate taxes, and what was left would be divided six ways. What they inherited would help them buy homes, educate their own children, and start businesses. With their inheritances, they would be comfortable, but none of them would be very wealthy from what their parents left them.Their mother, Connie, had inherited a small amount from her aristocratic parents and grandparents, but their fortune had never equaled Preston’s, and what she’d inherited had dwindled to very little over the years. But Preston supported them well.The most valuable asset they had to leave their children was the house they had lived in since before Lyle was born. It was an old once-xadgrand mansion they had bought for a ridiculously small sum in a foreclosure auction Connie had read about. No one wanted a house that size, so they bought it for a price they were able to afford at the time. It was in the East Seventies between Fifth and Madison Avenues, at a very impressive address. It had once been an extremely elegant home. They had turned it into a family home, despite its size and history. Its location made it valuable, and they expected their children to sell it one day for the substantial price it would bring. It had been an incredible opportunity when they bought it. Preston had been afraid it was too big when Connie found it, but with the six children they eventually had, it had proven to be perfect for them. It had beautiful moldings, magnificent high ceilings, graceful French windows, and several wood-paneled rooms. Connie and Preston maintained it well, but with some modernization and restoration, its grandeur could be easily refreshed by new owners willing and able to spend the money. It could bring a fortune from the right buyer. It had turned out to be their best investment, and was worth far more than they had paid for it forty-xadtwo years before.

Features & Highlights

  • NEW YORK TIMES
  • BESTSELLER • In this heartwarming novel from #1
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author Danielle Steel, adult siblings find their way back home—and back to each other—after loss.
  • Preston and Constance Whittier have built a happy life together, with a brood of six children raised in a beautiful historic Manhattan mansion. Now, with a nearly empty nest, it’s easier than ever for the Whittiers to maintain their tradition of a solo romantic “Wintermoon” ski trip.But with this year’s trip comes tragedy, and suddenly the Whittiers’ adult children find themselves reuniting in the family home without their parents for the first time ever. The oldest, Lyle, is reaching a breaking point in his marriage and must decide whether a divorce would be best for him and his two children. Gloria’s big job on Wall Street has kept her single at thirty-nine, and growing ever more cynical. The twins, Caroline and Charlie, moved out long ago to start a fashion business that may now be faltering. Benjie, with special needs, is hit hard by the loss of his parents and needs his siblings’ help. And Annabelle, the youngest, drops out of college and starts to spin out of control.The eldest four are forced to put aside their personal issues and their grief to keep the family together and support each other and their two youngest siblings. Selling the house, along with all the memories that live in its walls, feels like yet another devastating loss. Could there be another way, as unconventional as it seems?In
  • The Whittiers,
  • Danielle Steel delivers an inspiring story about the everlasting bonds of one unforgettable family.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(5.3K)
★★★★
25%
(2.2K)
★★★
15%
(1.3K)
★★
7%
(622)
-7%
(-622)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

A Heart-touching book!.perfect holiday read!

Danielle Steel's The Whittiers is a beautiful, heartfelt book. The Whittiers are a large family struck by a devastating tragedy. Each unique character is loveable and adds a wonderful dynamic to the family unit. What begins as slow-burn quickly becomes an engrossing page-turner as Steel gently unfolds the story.

As a fan of Danielle Steel for many years, I am always amazed by her deep and emotional writing style. The Whittiers is another example of Steel's ability to connect with the human spirit. Full of depth and heart-touching moments, the book reached down and touched my soul.

The Whittiers is available on November 22nd.

Thank you NetGalley and Random House Publishing Group - Ballantine, for sharing this absolutely stunning novel with me. The Whittiers is clean and refreshing. I appreciate your kindness!
8 people found this helpful
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Family Fiction

THE WHITTIERS
Danielle Steel
Women’s Fiction

After the tragedy of losing their parents in an accident, the ax adult children reunite in the family home to plan the care of their special needs sibling. Will six siblings find joy in each other or will everything the Whittiers parents worked toward for so long go up in smoke?

This was an excellent book. The writing talent that is Danielle Steel takes these characters to such depth here is incredible. She has an uncanny ability to show both their good and bad sides of characters and still have them relatable. She never fails to amaze me with her writing skills. I give this book a solid 5 out of 5 stars.
6 people found this helpful
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Is her writing always this bad?

I actually laughed out loud a few times at how poorly written this book (and the dialogue within) was. I wanted to love it - was looking for a good family story - but wow. Read like my high school fiction writing attempts. I kept with it thinking it had to get better but no such luck. I’ve never read Danielle Steele before …. is she always this bad?! (Also the pit bull comment was annoyingly ignorant and unnecessary.)
5 people found this helpful
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Not realistic, boring

It could have been written by a high school kid. Like a soap opera - could skip chapters, and not lose story line.
5 people found this helpful
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Share Relaxation

I read this book for relaxation. The story flows and it takes you away from all your worries as it is fiction and there is nothing bad in the writing. You read a non violent story .
3 people found this helpful
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Family Story

I finished this book. I liked it. The characters were all interesting and I wanted to know more about them.
I didn't agree with all the decisions that the members of the family make.
The members of the Whittier family lose their parents in a skiing accident.
It is the story of the children in the family and about what happens to them after they lose their parents. They all have decisions to make.
One of the adult children is disabled. I thought the way his character was presented was just so-so.
The children also have to decide what they are going to do with the family home, now that their parents are gone. I didn't really agree with the decision they made regarding the house.
3 people found this helpful
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Satisfying domestic drama!

The Whittiers have always been a close knit family but become even closer after the unexpected death of their parents. Preston and Constance Whittier left a generous bequest to each of their six children but expected that they would sell the sprawling, fourteen bedroom home in New York City and divide the profits. After all, the sale would bring at least $50 million.

As the adult children gather at the home where they were raised, it is obvious that they want to keep the house. Lyle, the oldest, married without a prenup and is now fighting his soon-to-be ex-wife over his inheritance. The family home is a sanctuary for him and his two young children. Next to youngest son Ben is on the autism spectrum and needs some supervision. Youngest daughter Annabelle has been hitting the party circuit hard since dropping out of college. The twins Charlie and Caro run a successful fashion company but are burned out by the constant, consuming work schedule as is their sister Gloria, a high powered lawyer. As the older children drift back to the family home, they realize that some things are more important than money. During the next months without their parents, all their lives will change.

Danielle Steel is a guilty pleasure. She always delivers a satisfying read where love wins, families are reunited and values are championed. Add luxurious houses, fascinating careers and a strong plot to the mix and you have instant success. Enjoy! 5 stars.

Thank you to NetGalley, Random House Publishing Group - Ballantine and Danielle Steel for this ARC,
3 people found this helpful
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LEAN ON YOUR FAMILY

After the death of their parents the Whittiers children need to decide what to do with the home of their late parents.
After many ups and downs they decide to live in the house of their late parents.
How they get there and why they made that decision, is for you as reader to find out.
Enjoy every minute of this book just like I did.
You will not be disappointed.
2 people found this helpful
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Small Spoiler Alert

I am under the assumption that Ms. Steel's audience for her novels are women. Why then was there so much emphasis on the gay male couple in this book? Why was their so much detail about their relationship, yet not a lot about some of the other characters? And the autistic man is always with his dogs. Come on...This one got trite after a while. Ms. Steel, write fewer books but make them of better quality.
2 people found this helpful
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Great book

I bought this for my Mom for Christmas. It came in time for me to read it before Christmas. I enjoyed it so much! After Christmas Mom started reading it one day and finished it the next. Mom loved it too!
2 people found this helpful