Review: I don't think men ponder on the past as much as women do, so I was very interested in the story of Jillian and how she ends up in her "What if". You see Jillian is a stay at home mom to an adorable toddler named Katie, but her marriage to Henry seems stale and predictable. It doesn't help that Henry travels all the time and Jill is in fact very lonely. So when she hears that her ex-boyfriend Jackson is getting married, gets a chi cleansing massage she ends up in her past trying to see if this was a path she was supposed to take.
As Jill works her way through her old life with Jackson trying to repair what went wrong, she finds that maybe no matter what you do, maybe the past and the future are inevitable. Once you go back and undo things, you always change the future for good or bad. In Jill's case, the changes were for the good.
I really liked Jill. I could identify with Jill. I felt for Jill and her struggles. I've had many of the same feelings that Jill was going through. My "what if" wouldn't be an ex boyfriend or even replacing my husband, it would be more if I chose to follow a different path professionally. Where would I be? Would I be successful?
One of my favorite quotes in the book is the following:
In real life, most marriages don't come undone with one big explosion. Unlike in the movies, most wives don't stumble upon lipstick on a collar or discover a hotel receipt in a blazer pocket. Most wives don't uncover hidden gambling problems or latent addictions or experience out-of-nowhere abuse that pops up one day and destroys everything. Some do, but most, no, not most. Most marriages unravel slowly, slipping drop by drop, like water ebbing through a curled palm, until one day, you look down and notice that it, you hand, is entirely empty. That's how most marriages dissolve and run dry. ~page 166
I also liked that Jill realized that it wasn't all her husband's fault either, that she was at fault for some of the unraveling. How, in marriage and friendships, it's usually both parties that are at fault in some ways and it's all who are involved that can make it sink or swim.
If you've ever asked yourself "What If", the I highly recommend Time of My Life, it might put all your questions about your past to bed.
Final Take: 4/5
2 comments:
Loved your review! Time of My Life sounds like a captivating read. How strange to wake up several years earlier in your life but a great way to put things in perspective!
I think its sad the way people get so used to doing things a certain way in life that they don't realize, until it's too late sometimes, that things aren't going so well anymore. But it's hard not to get caught up in work, kids, volunteering etc.
I think in addition to a great story, Time of My Life is a wake-up call of sorts for us all.
thanks for your review, i am about halfway through this book and when i picked it up, i thought (no idea why) it was going to be a little more on the lighter side .. more shopaholic style. So i have found it a little harder to get through, but you are spot on with your review.
I think I identify with her so closely that it could be why it is a hard read for me! I find it refreshing how honest the character of Jill is in relation to her newborn, her what if's. My what if would be the choice to have a child and yet i can't imagine her not being here. Much in the same way as Jill finds herself.
Thanks again..Wonderful site :)
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