![]() ![]() Rae’s innumerable regrets about Lark – with whom she was fighting because, among other things, Rae never told Lark who her biological father was – still come to the surface while Quinn is around. ![]() Rae and Conner decide to take Quinn in Quinn was a friend of Lark’s, and having him around helps bring Lark back to life again. ![]() Those signs – footprints in newly fallen snow – actually come from a teenage neighbor, eighteen-year-old Quinn Galecki, whose parents threw him out of the house on his birthday. Her only friend is Yuna, who works at the local craft store. Thirtyish Rae Langdon works with her father, Conner, helping him run the family ranch, which is slowly falling into disrepair Consumed with grief over the death of her teenage daughter Lark in a wintertime drowning accident (an echo of her own mother’s death in a blizzard years before), Rae becomes obsessed with signs that someone has been on their property. But the problem with it is that it is merely ‘nice’ touched with ‘As you know, Bob’ style dialogue and some broad characters, it falls short of a definite recommendation. ![]() The Passing Storm is a sensitively rendered and readable novel about found family and the importance of grieving wholeheartedly. ![]()
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