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The Light We Tend
Coles
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The Light We Tend in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $14.00


By None
The Light We Tend in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $14.00
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
Maisie Carr has spent three years writing other people's stories.
She's good at it. Good enough that when her own life quietly comes apart — the apartment, the relationship, the version of herself she'd been maintaining like a second job — she knows how to disappear into someone else's story. But as she escapes to Harrow Cove, her struggle between hiding from her pain and confronting it begins.
Harrow Cove asks nothing of her. The cottage is small. The honest harbor faces a lighthouse, tended by the same man each morning for three years.
She tells herself she's just watching.
Eli Holt lost his wife four years ago.
He didn't stop. That's the thing people don't understand about grief — you don't stop, you just go quiet on the inside and keep doing the outside things. The lighthouse. The breakfast. The seven o'clock. But for Eli, these rituals are also a shield, keeping his grief and his daughter's needs at bay.
He's been tending the light.
But he hasn’t been looking for change, or even aware that he needs one.
But then there's a woman at the cottage with a notebook.
And his daughter takes her to the tide pools.
And when Maisie enters their world, both she and Eli are forced to confront what they've tried to avoid: that sometimes, moving forward means facing what hurts most.
The Light We Tend is about places that find you when you stop looking, about grief that learns to make room, a girl who keeps calendars and tells Cora in October, and an old man who opens doors but never walks through them for you.
And about two people who must choose between retreating from pain and risking everything to stay for themselves and each other.
Some lights tend themselves.
Some need a keeper.
And sometimes, if you stay long enough, you become part of what the light finds.
This is a novel that is quietly devastating and full of light, leaving you sitting with it after the final page.
"Rosie alone is worth the whole novel."
"I didn't know I needed this book until I was already inside it."
Also perfect for readers of:
Elin Hilderbrand · Kristin Hannah · Emily Henry · Carrie Soto Is Back · The Midnight Library
Maisie Carr has spent three years writing other people's stories.
She's good at it. Good enough that when her own life quietly comes apart — the apartment, the relationship, the version of herself she'd been maintaining like a second job — she knows how to disappear into someone else's story. But as she escapes to Harrow Cove, her struggle between hiding from her pain and confronting it begins.
Harrow Cove asks nothing of her. The cottage is small. The honest harbor faces a lighthouse, tended by the same man each morning for three years.
She tells herself she's just watching.
Eli Holt lost his wife four years ago.
He didn't stop. That's the thing people don't understand about grief — you don't stop, you just go quiet on the inside and keep doing the outside things. The lighthouse. The breakfast. The seven o'clock. But for Eli, these rituals are also a shield, keeping his grief and his daughter's needs at bay.
He's been tending the light.
But he hasn’t been looking for change, or even aware that he needs one.
But then there's a woman at the cottage with a notebook.
And his daughter takes her to the tide pools.
And when Maisie enters their world, both she and Eli are forced to confront what they've tried to avoid: that sometimes, moving forward means facing what hurts most.
The Light We Tend is about places that find you when you stop looking, about grief that learns to make room, a girl who keeps calendars and tells Cora in October, and an old man who opens doors but never walks through them for you.
And about two people who must choose between retreating from pain and risking everything to stay for themselves and each other.
Some lights tend themselves.
Some need a keeper.
And sometimes, if you stay long enough, you become part of what the light finds.
This is a novel that is quietly devastating and full of light, leaving you sitting with it after the final page.
"Rosie alone is worth the whole novel."
"I didn't know I needed this book until I was already inside it."
Also perfect for readers of:
Elin Hilderbrand · Kristin Hannah · Emily Henry · Carrie Soto Is Back · The Midnight Library

















