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Cecily’s Choice

Cecily’s Choice is a contemporary family drama with mystery elements about Cecily MacIntyre, a young watercolor artist who returns to Mendocino under pressure to complete a major hotel commission. What begins as a professional challenge soon becomes something much more personal when Cecily is forced to face the family tragedy she fled years earlier, including the fire that killed her mother and the disappearance of her brother, Allison. The story follows her through work, memory, fear, and reunion as she begins to understand that going home is not the same as going backward.

I appreciated how the book ties Cecily’s art to her inner life. The painting scenes are not just decorative. They show how she sees the world, and more importantly, how that vision changes as she starts to heal. At first, the coast is a workplace and a deadline. Then it becomes memory. Then inheritance. The author makes strong use of the Mendocino setting, and I could feel the cold air, the cliffs, the ocean, and the stubborn quiet of the place. Sometimes the story is direct, almost plainspoken, but that works for the kind of story being told because it feels sincere.

What stood out to me most was the book’s interest in courage. Not loud courage. Not heroic speeches. The quieter kind. Cecily has to keep painting even when she is afraid she will fail. Allison has to come back to a past he barely understands. Audrey has to let old wounds into the room instead of keeping them neatly folded away. I did find some turns in the plot a bit convenient, especially near the end, but I also understood the emotional purpose behind those choices. This is not a cynical book. It wants restoration to be possible, and there is something refreshing about that.

I would recommend Cecily’s Choice to readers who enjoy gentle contemporary fiction, family-centered drama, and stories about artists finding their footing. It will especially appeal to those who like books about returning home, rebuilding broken ties, and discovering that the work we thought might break us can sometimes lead us back to ourselves.

Pages: 112 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0H3CQQ1KL

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