How to Walk Away: A Novel
How to Walk Away: A Novel book cover

How to Walk Away: A Novel

Hardcover – May 15, 2018

Price
$12.08
Format
Hardcover
Pages
320
Publisher
St. Martin's Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1250149060
Dimensions
6.41 x 1.15 x 9.57 inches
Weight
1.14 pounds

Description

Praise for How to Walk Away :An instant New York Times bestseller (May 2018)! "A marvelous example of acceptance and healing and a celebration of family." ― USA Today "Center explores the limits of hope and love ...[she] transforms the story of a family tragedy into a heartfelt guide to living the fullest life possible ." ― Publisher's Weekly "With its appealing characters and wisdom about grappling with life’s challenges, Center’s sixth novel has all the makings of a breakout hit. " ― Booklist (starred review)“ Inspiring and romantic … A touching and truthful novel that shows how people can find comfort in the most unexpected places.” ― Library Journal "A story about survival that is heartbreakingly honest and wryly funny , perfect for fans of Jojo Moyes and Elizabeth Berg." ― Kirkus "A heartbreak of a novel that celebrates resilience and strength. " ―Jill Santopolo, bestselling author of The Light We Lost "If you just read one book this year, read How to Walk Away ." ―Nina George, New York Times bestselling author of The Little Paris Bookshop "Warm, witty , and wonderfully observed." ―Emily Giffin, New York Times bestselling author of First Comes Love "Sympathetic and refreshing !" ―Elinor Lipman, bestselling author of The Family Man "I can't think of a blurb good enough for this novel... poignant, funny, heartbreaking. " ―Jenny Lawson, bestselling author of Furiously Happy Katherine Center is the author of the upcoming novel, How to Walk Away. She writes bittersweet comic stories about how we fall down--and how we get back up. Her inspiring novels are always about how we struggle to find our way through life's hardships and learn to savor its joys at the same time.#1 NYT Bestselling Author Emily Giffin describes Katherine's writing as "warm, witty, and wonderfully observed . . . reads like an intimate conversation with your best friend."The Dallas Morning news says, "Reading a book by Katherine Center is like having a long lunch conversation with an old friend you haven't seen for a while -- familiar, cozy and satisfying in the most soul-nourishing way."#1 NYT Bestselling Author Brené Brown says: "Katherine Center writes about falling down, growing up, and finding love like nobody else."Katherine's other novels include: The Bright Side of Disaster, Everyone Is Beautiful, Get Lucky, The Lost Husband, and Happiness for Beginners.Her books and essays have appeared in InStyle, Redbook, People, USA Today, Vanity Fair, The Atlantic, Real Simple, and others, as well as several anthologies.Instant Pictures recently optioned movie rights for The Lost Husband, which People calls "A sweet tale about creating the family you need."xa0xa0Katherine's books have been featured at Target and Costco, BookPage named her a new writer to watch, the Houston Press named her a Top Ten writer in the city. Her novels have been published all around the world. She's won a number of awards for her work, including the Girls, Inc. Strong, Smart & Bold Award, the Rose State President's Distinguished Author Award, and the Vassar College Fiction Prize.xa0Katherine is also a speaker on the power of stories.xa0xa0She lives in her hometown of Houston, Texas, with her husband, two kids, and their fluffy-but-fierce dog. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. How to Walk Away By Katherine Center St. Martin's Press Copyright © 2018 Katherine Pannill CenterAll rights reserved.ISBN: 978-1-250-14906-0 CHAPTER 1 THE BIGGEST IRONY about that night is that I was always scared to fly. Always. Ever since I was old enough to think about it. It seemed counterintuitive. Even a little arrogant. Why go up when gravity clearly wanted us to stay down? Back in high school, my parents took my big sister, Kitty, and me to Hawaii one year. I dreaded the flight from the moment they told us until well after we were home again. The phrase "flying to Hawaii" translated in my head to "drowning in the ocean." The week before the trip, I found myself planning out survival strategies. One night after lights out, I snuck to Kitty's room and climbed into her bed. I was a freshman, and she was a senior, which gave her a lot of authority. "What's the plan?" I demanded. Her face was half buried in the pillow. "The plan for what?" "For when the plane hits." She opened an eye. "Hits what?" "The ocean. On the way to Hawaii." She held my gaze for a second. "That's not going to happen." "I have a bad feeling," I said. "Now you're jinxing us." "This is serious. We need a survival strategy." She reached out and patted my bangs. "There is no survival strategy." "There has to be." "No." She shook her head. "Because if we don't crash, we won't need one. And if we do crash ..." She paused so I could catch her drift. "We won't need one?" A nod. "We'll just be dead." Then she snapped her fingers. "You make it sound easy." "Dying is easy. It's not dying that's hard." "Guess you have a point there." She closed her eyes. "That's why I'm the brains of the family." "I thought I was the brains," I said, nudging her. She rolled away. "You know you're the beauty." Impossibly, we survived that trip. Just as impossibly, I survived many more trips after that, never hitting anything worse than turbulence. I'd read the statistics about how flying was the safest of all the modes of transportation — from cars to trains to gondolas. I'd even once interned at an office right next to an international airport and watched planes go up and come down all day long with nary a problem. I should have been long over it. But I never could lose the feeling that "flying" and "crashing" were kind of the same thing. Now, years later, I was dating — seriously dating — a guy who was just days away from getting his pilot's license. Dating him so seriously, in fact, that on this particular Saturday, as we headed out to celebrate my not-yet-but-almost-official new dream job, I could not shake the feeling that he was also just about to ask me to marry him. Like, any second. Which is why I was wearing a strapless black sundress. If I'd thought about it, I might have paused to wonder how my boyfriend, the impossibly fit and charming Charles Philip Dunbar, could be one hundred percent perfect for me in every possible way — and also be such an air travel enthusiast. He never thought twice about flying at all — or doing anything scary, for that matter, like scuba diving or bungee jumping. He had an inherent faith in the order of the universe and the principles of physics and the right of mankind to bend those principles to its will. Me, I'd always suspected that chaos was stronger than order. When it was Man against Nature, my money was on Nature every time. "You just never paid attention in science class," Chip always said, like I was simply under-informed. True enough. But that didn't make me wrong. Chip believed that his learning to fly was going to cure my fears. He believed that he'd become so awesome and inspiring that I'd have no choice but to relax and enjoy it. On this, we had agreed to disagree. "I will never, ever fly with you," I'd announced before his first lesson. "You think that now, but one day you'll beg me to take you up." I shook my head, like, Nope. "Not really a beggar." "Not yet." Now, he was almost certified. He'd done both his solo and his solo cross-country. He'd completed more than twice his required hours of flight training, just to be thorough. All that remained? His Check Ride, where a seasoned pilot would go up with him and put him in "stressful situations." "Don't tell me what they are," I'd said. But he told me anyway. "Like, they deliberately stall the plane, and you have to cope," he went on, very pleased at the notion of his impressive self-coping. "Or you do a short-field landing, where you don't have enough space. And of course: night flying." The Check Ride was next week. He'd be fine. Chip was the kind of guy who got calmer when things were going haywire. He'd make a perfect pilot. And I'd be perfectly happy for him to fly all he wanted. By himself. But first, we were getting engaged — or so I hoped. Possibly tonight. On Valentine's. I can't tell you how I knew, exactly. I'd just sensed it all day, somehow, the way you can sense it's going to rain. By the time I buckled in beside him in his Jeep, I was certain. I'd known Chip a long time. We'd been dating for three years. I knew every expression in his repertoire and every angle of his body. I knew when he was faking a laugh, or when he was bullshitting. I could tell in seconds if he liked a person or not. And I certainly knew when he was hiding something — especially something he was excited about. Even though this date seemed exactly like every other date we'd ever had, I just knew something big was about to happen. I figured he'd take us to the Italian place with the twinkle lights where we'd had our first date. But, instead of heading for downtown, he turned toward the freeway and ramped up. The top was off his Jeep. I clamped my arms down over my hair. "Where are we going?" I called. He called back, "It's a surprise!" My stomach dropped at that. Once again, I knew Chip's intentions without his even hinting. This was kind of a problem with us. I could read him too well. He wasn't taking me to dinner. He was taking me to the airport. * * * TWENTY MINUTES LATER, we had left the city of Austin far behind. He pulled up the parking brake beside an airplane hangar at a private airfield in the middle of nowhere. I looked around. "You can't be serious." He leaned in. "Are you surprised?" "Yes and no." "Just pretend. Just once, I'd like to surprise you." "Fine. I'm shocked. I'm awed." "Don't pretend that much." He came around to my side and took me by the hand, and then he pulled me behind him, bent over all sneaky, around to the far side of the hangar. I followed him in a state of cognitive dissonance — knowing exactly what he was doing while insisting just as clearly that he couldn't possibly be doing it. "Are you sneaking me in here?" I whispered. "It's fine. My friend Dylan did it with his girlfriend last week." I tugged back against his hand. "Chip. I can't!" "Sure you can." "Is this — illegal?" "I just want to show you my plane." "It's not your plane, buddy." "Close enough." I had zero interest in seeing his plane. Less than zero. I was interested in wine and appetizers and candlelight. I almost had the job of my dreams! I wanted to be celebrating. I was in the mood to feel good, not bad. "Can't we just go to dinner?" He peered around, then turned back to me. " Anybody can go to dinner." "I'm cool with being anybody." "I'm not." Then, with a coast-is-clear shrug, he pulled me out across the pavement and stopped in front of a little white Cessna. It looked like the kind of plane you'd see in a cartoon — wings up high, body below, and a spinny little propeller nose. Very patriotic, too. Red, white, and blue stripes. "Cute," I said with a nod, like, Great. We're done. But he took my shoulders and pointed me toward the cockpit. I took a step back. "What are you doing?" "Let's go for a ride." "I'm afraid to fly. Remember?" "Time to get over that." "I'll throw up. I'll be motion-sick." "Not with me, you won't be." "It's not about you. It's about flying." "You just need the right pilot." I was shaking my head — half disbelief, half refusal. "You're not even certified." "I'm as good as certified. I've done everything there is." "Except take the test." "But the test is just to see what you've already learned. " "Chip? No. " "Margaret? Yes. And right now before they catch us." The force of his insistence was almost physical, like a strong wind you have to brace against. He wanted to do this. He wanted me to do this — to show faith in him, to believe in him. It wasn't a test, exactly, but it was still something I could fail. I wasn't a person who failed things. I was a person who aced things. It felt like a big moment. It felt draped in metaphorical significance about bravery, and trust, and adventurousness — like it would reveal something essential about who I was and how I'd live the rest of my whole life. Saying no to flying right now suddenly felt like saying no to every possibility forever. Did I want to be a person who let minuscule statistical risks undermine any sense of bravery? Was this a challenge I couldn't rise to? Was I going to let fear make me small ? I'm not sure I ever really had a choice. Chip was Chip. He was my perfect man, and I'd thought so ever since his parents moved in next door to my parents, back when we were both in college. Our mothers became best next-door-neighbor friends, drinking wine on the patio and gossiping, but I only saw him on vacations. In the summers, his dad made him mow the lawn, and I'd stand at our window and watch. One time, my mom urged me to take him out a bottle of water, and he glugged the whole thing down in one swoop. I still remember it in slow-mo. But I really didn't know him at all until we both wound up at business school together back home in Austin by accident. I was team leader of our study group, and he worked under me, which was good for him. That's how we fell in love. I'd have married him that first night we kissed, if he'd asked me. He was that kind of guy. Tall, clean-shaven, blond, all-American, high-achieving, confident. And dreamy. People did what he wanted. I felt lucky to be with him, and I'd doodled "Margaret Dunbar" more times than I'll ever admit. I once Googled dog breeds for our future pet. And one night, when shopping for something else — I swear — on the Home Depot website, I clicked on a little pop-up box for wood fence pickets. Just to see how much they were. Now we were both out of school with our brand-new MBAs, both about to start our new jobs — Chip as an entry-level financial analyst at an investment bank, a job he found through a friend of his dad, and me as a business development manager for an oil and gas company called Simtex Petroleum. His job was good, but mine was far better, and I thought it was sporting of him, and rather gallant, to be so happy for me. In truth, I wasn't even qualified for my new job. It required "five years of experience in the sector," "advanced knowledge of bidding for commercial contracts," and actual "international experience," none of which I had — but my B-school mentor had gone out on a limb for me, calling in a favor from a friend and writing a stunning letter of recommendation that called me a "fiercely energetic forward thinker, a problem solver, an excellent communicator, and a team player with strong business and financial acumen." I'd laughed when he'd showed me the job listing. "I'm not remotely qualified for this." "People get jobs they're not qualified for all the time." I stared at the description. "They want 'demonstrated strategic and higher operational level engagement with the logistics environment.'" "You're a shoo-in." "I'm a joke." "Now you're just thinking like a girl." "I am a girl." "We need to remedy that." I gave him a look. "When you go to this interview, I want you to pretend to be a man." I closed my eyes. "Pretend to be a man." "A badass man," he confirmed. "A man who's not just qualified, but overqualified." I shook my head at him. "Qualifications," he said, "pale in the face of confidence." "If you say so," I said. Though I didn't believe it for a second. I went into the interview that day fully expecting to be laughed out of the room. But I did what he told me to. I pretended like hell — if nothing else, to prove him wrong. Then they offered me the job. Or, at least, as the HR guy walked me to the lobby, he touched my shoulder and said, "It's not official, but you've got it." My starting salary was going to be 50K higher than Chip's — but my mother told me not to tell him that. The important thing was: We were beginning our lives. Things were falling into place. And here, at the airfield, I didn't want to be the only thing that didn't. Chip squeezed my hands. "You trust me, right?" "Yes." Sort of. Then he pulled me into a kiss — a manly, determined, all-this-can-be-yours kiss, digging his tongue into my mouth in a way that he clearly found powerful and erotic, but that I, given how the sheer terror of what I was about to do had iced my blood, was too numb to feel. Then he swatted me on the butt and said, "Climb in." What can I say? I did it. But I'm telling you, my hands were shaking. As I worked on hooking the shoulder strap, I gave myself a stern talking-to: This was the right thing to do. Wasn't that what love was, after all? Saying yes — not just when it was easy, but also when it was hard? Of course, any analyst worth her degree could have easily made the exact opposite argument: that I should trust my gut, and I shouldn't let Chip push me into doing things I didn't want to do. That his lack of respect for my genuine discomfort in the face of his Top Gun fantasies did not bode well for our long-term prospects. But I wasn't going there. I was going flying. Then he was next to me, buckling up and handing me a set of black headphones. I had that feeling you get once you've picked a roller coaster seat and clamped yourself in. Chip immediately shifted into character as the pilot. He slid his aviator sunglasses on and pressed the headphone mic so close to his mouth that his lips brushed against it, and started speaking a language to the control tower so specialized, it was basically nonsense: "South Austin Clearance Delivery — Cessna Three Two Six Tango Delta Charlie with information Juliet — VFR to Horseshoe Bay cruising three thousand three hundred." It sounded to me like he was pretending. Who talked like that? But the tower didn't agree. Crackling through the headphones came "Cessna Three Two Six Tango Delta Charlie — South Austin Clearance — squawk two three one four, departure frequency will be one two zero point niner." Oh, shit. This was happening. Chip checked instruments and dials, looking them over like a pro. He looked at ease. Capable. Trustworthy. Macho, too. And, dammit, yes: super cool. "I already went through my safety checklist before I came to get you — twice," he said. His voice was crackly through the headphones, but he took my hand and squeezed. "Didn't want to give you time to change your mind." Smart. But I was all in by this point. I'd made my choice. For better or worse, as they say. So Chip turned his attention to bigger things. Still in sexy-pilot mode, he spoke into the mic and gave another nonsense message to the tower, confirming that we were waiting for the runway. I'd never been in the cockpit of a plane before, and this plane was all cockpit. Technically, there were two seats behind us, but it felt like we were in a Matchbox car. Another plane had to land before we could take off, and I studied the dashboard with all its knobs and dials and 'ometers. I pointed at it. "Isn't this kind of tall?" It was higher than my head. I could barely see over. He nodded. "It's not like driving a car," he explained, "where it's all about what you see. Flying's more instrument based." "You don't look out the windshield?" "You do, but you're looking at the instruments and gauges just as much. It's half looking, half math." The other plane touched down, slowed, and trundled past us. See? I said to myself. They survived. We revved up, Chip announced us again over the radio, and he started working the pedals to bring us into position. The blades on the propeller spun so fast they disappeared. The plane vibrated and hummed. I sat on my cold hands so I wouldn't squeeze them into fists. "Please don't do any loop-de-loops or anything," I said then. (Continues...) Excerpted from How to Walk Away by Katherine Center . Copyright © 2018 Katherine Pannill Center. Excerpted by permission of St. Martin's Press. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • From the author of
  • Happiness for Beginner
  • s comes the instant
  • New York Times
  • bestseller (May 2018), an unforgettable love story about finding joy even in the darkest of circumstances.
  • Margaret Jacobsen is just about to step into the bright future she’s worked for so hard and so long: a new dream job, a fiancé she adores, and the promise of a picture-perfect life just around the corner. Then, suddenly, on what should have been one of the happiest days of her life, everything she worked for is taken away in a brief, tumultuous moment. In the hospital and forced to face the possibility that nothing will ever be the same again, Maggie must confront the unthinkable. First there is her fiancé, Chip, who wallows in self-pity while simultaneously expecting to be forgiven. Then, there's her sister Kit, who shows up after pulling a three-year vanishing act. Finally, there's Ian, her physical therapist, the one the nurses said was too tough for her. Ian, who won't let her give in to her pity, and who sees her like no one has seen her before. Sometimes the last thing you want is the one thing you need. Sometimes we all need someone to catch us when we fall. And sometimes love can find us in the least likely place we would ever expect.
  • How to Walk Away
  • is Katherine Center at her very best―a masterpiece of a novel that is both hopeful and hilarious; truthful and wise; tender and brave.
  • Praise for
  • How to Walk Away
  • :
  • "A heartbreak of a novel that
  • celebrates resilience and strength.
  • " ―Jill Santopolo, bestselling author of
  • The Light We Lost
  • "If you just read one book this year,
  • read
  • How to Walk Away
  • ." ―Nina George,
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author of
  • The Little Paris Bookshop
  • "Warm, witty
  • , and wonderfully observed." ―Emily Giffin,
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author of
  • First Comes Love
  • "Sympathetic and
  • refreshing
  • !" ―Elinor Lipman, bestselling author of
  • The Family Man
  • "I can't think of a blurb good enough for this novel...
  • poignant, funny, heartbreaking.
  • " ―Jenny Lawson, bestselling author of
  • Furiously Happy

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(2.3K)
★★★★
25%
(1.9K)
★★★
15%
(1.1K)
★★
7%
(528)
23%
(1.7K)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

2.5 out of 5 stars

First, I can appreciate how much work and research must have gone into writing this book. From a physical and medical stand point, it seemed legit. The plot, dialogue and character developments, I felt, were completely lacking. No chemistry between the love interests, no build up or development of any of those relationships... which was unfortunate since that seemed to be the major backbone of the book. I just couldn’t connect with any character. Further, what I assumed to be a major plot twist didn’t shock me, instead it just happened in a very underwhelming way. I really wanted to love this book as the book summary sounded very promising and I hadn’t read anything similar but I couldn’t get in to it. I ended up skipping over long dialogue that didn’t really seem to serve a purpose and did the same with descriptive paragraphs. I read it in one night and felt pretty underwhelmed, unfortunately. This had so much promise but fell so flat for me. The stars I gave are solely for the trouble the author took in researching the medical data and therapy treatments. It was clear she was very thorough.
71 people found this helpful
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GREAT READ!

I went into this book not knowing what to expect since I have never read anything by this author and honestly not even 100% sure I would like it! But I loved it! I loved the main character and how she was a little bit snarky and a little bit funny. For sure there were some great one liners that made me laugh out loud!
And while the MC went through something devastating and had to learn to live again and be happy she did it with determination!
The one part of the story that was a real draw for me and kept me hooked is the dynamic between family members. This is just a great "turn life around", feel good story and I would highly recommend it to anyone! I will definitely check out the authors other works.
31 people found this helpful
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... the number of positive reviews but I was really disappointed with it

I purchased this book based on the number of positive reviews but I was really disappointed with it. Maggie was indeed inspirational, but for the most part, the characters and the plot were one dimensional and rather boring. I found myself skipping ahead in parts and mostly just trying to finish it so I could see how it ended and in the hope that the book would redeem itself. It was a quick read but I did not enjoy the journey very much at all. I was planning to pass it on to one of my sisters but honestly, it just wasn't good enough to do so. Off to the consignment shop it goes.
31 people found this helpful
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Center Sends it Out of the Park

I admit to being a Katherine Center fan for many reasons, the most important of which is that she keeps getting better. This book had me mesmerized from page 1.

You feel the experiences of Margaret, the protagonist. I also understood the motivations and behaviors of the other characters. Being able to make the reader care about all of the characters is one of the things that makes some authors better than others. It's relatively easy to make us understand the main character, but making us care about the others is a real talent.

Finished the book that night and sent copies off to friends. What better recommendation than buying it for others?
21 people found this helpful
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Interesting Subject but Too Predictable

I bought this book (hardback!) based on glowing reviews but it fell short of the props and kudos by so many other reviewers. The good points: The book dealt with a subject most of us know little about, spinal cord injuries. The book demonstrated the challenges of the paraplegic just dealing with basic daily activities. It described how Margaret's relationships with everyone from her mother to her fiance to her friends changed after the accident. The style was breezy, readable and the pace was good. I was also glad to have a book that was chronological. So many modern novels have us careening back and forth between characters, eras and issues. It began at the beginning of the story, set the stage and moved through to a satisfying ending. There was a plot twist of a family secret being exposed that kept it from being totally focused on Margaret's accident adding some interest.

The reasons I gave How to Walk Away a "meh" review were the predictability of the romance...I knew in about the third chapter how it would end...and the rather flat, unlikable characters. Also it seemed far fetched that Chip her erstwhile fiance (for about ten minutes) who crashed the plane and caused Margaret's injuries, had no liability to her for the injuries and the expenses she would incur for the rest of her life. Had this happened in real life Chip and his family would have been on the hook just as if he'd been driving a car.

It may be that a younger reader would find this book more appealing. I didn't expect a romance novel based on the reviews. Had I known I might have waited to buy it in paperback.
10 people found this helpful
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Should be called How to Say No

This book should be called How to Say No. Your perfect boyfriend doesn't respect your limits and pushes you into a terrifying situation that nearly kills you? Hmmmm. Perhaps not so perfect. Perhaps you need to learn to say No. And then practice saying No to your pushy mom who also doesn't seem to respect your boundaries, either. What an awful, voctim-based story. I assume the main character triumphs in the end - after working with the PT who doesn't respect her boundaries?! Ugh.
9 people found this helpful
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A miss for me (though I am likely in the minority)

After reading so many psychological thrillers and mystery novels over the past few months, I picked up "How to Walk Away" for a bit of lighter fare. I'd read and heard good reviews so I was cautiously optimistic about enjoying this novel. (The only reason I say cautiously optimistic is because oftentimes, romance novels are out of my wheelhouse).

Margaret "Maggie" Jacobson is living the dream life: a job she can't wait to start, the other half of an envied couple, and a new condo she'd just purchased, until one day it's all taken away from her in quite literally, the blink of an eye. In the aftermath, with the help of her family and a sexy Scottish occupational therapist, she'll learn to pick herself up again.

Let me start by saying that I am likely in the minority on this novel but I didn't enjoy it. It didn't work for me on a number of levels, from the power dynamics of a broken-down hurt woman falling for the one man that shows her attention to the low-grade misogyny that popped up throughout. On a content note, the plot felt cheesy and overwrought to me. Without getting into spoilers, there is an instance where a particular subplot is brought up early on in the novel, nearly immediately dropped, and doesn't re-appear until the end of the book. It was so frustrating, as was the overly-positive tone. It felt like too much. Unfortunately, this novel was a miss for me.
7 people found this helpful
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Easy to predict the storyline before it ever happens

Simple read. Easy to predict the storyline before it ever happens. It's billed as a book on emotions and complexity, but it really glosses over those areas of substance and focuses on a predictable romance.
7 people found this helpful
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Buy this book and carve out some time in your schedule to devour it!

Make some time in your schedule because you will not want to put this book down. Katherine Center writes characters so real you feel like you've known them your whole life. This is her best book yet and you will keep reading into the night just to see how everything turns out for Margaret. It is smart, sweet, funny and uplifting and I scribbled down several quotes to use as motivation in my own life.
Buy this book for yourself, your best friend, your mother, your sister, everyone you know!
7 people found this helpful
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A must read!

How to Walk Away is Katherine Center’s best book yet. She has crafted a beautiful, heartbreaking, and thoroughly romantic novel that is sure to be a hit with everyone who reads it. Soon after the book opens, Margaret Jacobsen’s world changes in an instant, and she must learn to forge ahead while trying to move on from the past. Margaret is tougher than she thinks and with the help of her sister and her physical therapist Ian, she slowly begins to create a new path for herself while learning to adjust to newly discovered family secrets and heartbreak. The story is clever, unpredictable, devastating, and ultimately unforgettable. Center has crafted fabulous, genuine characters that I loved and rooted for (Margaret, Kit, and Ian) and others that I wanted to throttle (Chip and his mother). And most importantly, the ending is outstanding.

How to Walk Away is thought-provoking and handles a tough subject effectively and realistically, refusing to sugarcoat Margaret’s predicament which I appreciated. I find it frustrating when an author includes a tough topic only to downplay or gloss over the difficulty of the situation. Moreover, Center has clearly done her research on Margaret’s condition which adds depth and authenticity to the story – I learned so much that I didn’t know. I think my favorite part of the book is Center’s message that people do not always control what happens to them, but they do control how they handle the issues that arise, whether the issues are significant or simply a blip on the screen of life. That message certainly resonates with me and is a good reminder that while certain things cannot be changed, I can alter how I approach responding to those things.

How to Walk Away is a fantastic book that I will continue thinking about for a long time. I highly recommend it, and when you sit down to read it have tissues ready. Clear your schedule before you start it, because you will not be able to put it down.
7 people found this helpful