Sometimes a girl just needs a little ChickLit. And when I feel that way, Rosamunde Pilcher is one of my favorite go-to authors.
In two words, this is what makes "Snow in April" so delightful: It's short. Or, more accurately, it's the perfect length. This love story is simple and sweet, and Pilcher tells it magnificently. She doesn't draw it out to be 200 pages longer than it needs to be and turn that simple and sweet story into an eye-rolling soap opera, a common problem with the ChickLit genre. This novel is succinct and to the point. And utterly charming.
Twenty-year-old Caroline Cliburn is engaged to be married to man 13 years her senior and really rather perfect—well, at least on paper he's perfect. Caroline and her 11-year-old brother, Jody, are orphans who live with their stepmother, Diana, and her new husband, Shaun. Although Diana is controlling and bossy, she is not an evil stepmother; she loves Caroline and Jody and they love her. After the wedding, Diana and Shaun will be moving from their London home to Montreal with Jody in tow. He doesn't want to go. Caroline and Jody have an older brother, Angus, whom they have just learned is working in a hotel in Scotland after cavorting around India and Afghanistan. In an ill-fated attempt to reach Angus, Caroline and Jody sneak off to Scotland, crashing their car in a ditch during an April blizzard. Fortunately (this IS ChickLit, after all), the aforementioned ditch is on the extensive property of a beautiful mansion. The siblings trudge to the door, which is opened by one Oliver Cairney, a man who is suffering from a recent tragedy. The story is how these two strangers—Caroline and Oliver—change one another's lives while forced together during a blizzard and its aftermath.
Yes, the characters are one-dimensional, and much of the plot is predictable. But all that is saved by the splendid writing and the tight storyline.
This is a lovely little novel that will take your mind off the real world. Of course, it's not great literature, but it wasn't meant to be. It was meant to be an entertaining and captivating story, and it succeeds masterfully at that.