311 Pelican Court by Debbie Macomber
Have you ever been through a divorce? If you had children, how was custody handled?
This was book 3 in the famous Cedar Cove series. This novel focused on Zach and Rosie Cox. They get a divorce and Judge Olivia makes an interesting custody agreement – instead of uprooting their children from their home, Zach and Rosie will need to share the house. Each parent must spend half of their week in the home, the other half in an apartment. This proves a weird arrangement and forces Zach and Rosie to re-think their marriage.
Zach and Rosie also have to deal with behavioral problems with their children.
Grace Sherman has a new love interest – Olivia’s brother (Will). She corresponds with Olivia’s brother over the internet, anxiously awaiting to meet him. She hears that he’s getting a divorce, so, possibly, she can begin dating him. A long-distance relationship, Grace finds herself anxious, addicted to her correspondence with Will. She also continues to sporadically date Cliff, an acquaintance who lives outside of town.
Mary Ellen struggles with single motherhood, locking Jon Bowman, the father of her baby, out of her life.
This series reminds me of a soap opera – a chaste soap opera. I enjoyed reading this book, and look forward to reading more novels in the Cedar Cove Series. I love the small town – the scenery and the characters are so realistic and they’re facing problems that many of us have suffered in our own lives.
Have you ever been through a divorce? If you had children, how was custody handled?
~Cecelia Dowdy~
I love this series on Hallmark Channel, so I began reading the books. I haven’t gotten to this one yet. Sounds good.
Thanks for commenting, Cheryl. I’ll probably try and catch some of the series if they show re-runs. I’ve found that after reading the three books, I need to wait to read the rest. The books are good, but, I’m ready to move on to other books. I think it’s like reading a movie script, and there are so many characters, I connected to the characters some, but, not as deeply as Debbie’s other books, like Starry Night. Kinda hard to connect to so many people at once.