If anyone else reads a lot of Nicholas Sparks books like I do, you already know the basic premise of every plot:
.
Boy meets girl. Boy falls in love with girl. Problem ensues, making it difficult for boy and girl to be together.
.
The Choice is no exception.
.
Travis Parker lives the perfect single life as a small town North Carolinian vet, until a pretty redhead named Gabby moves in next door. The two meet one day by chance that Gabby's dog has sudden complications with its pregnancy (after all, Travis is a verterinarian - who better to save the day?!). Despite the fact that Gabby is engaged (her fiance is out of town, or something), Travis repeatedly insists that Gabby hang out with him and his many family members and friends who come by for big outings quite often. Of course, after just a few short days (or maybe a week), Gabby and Travis fall in love. But what about her fiance?
.
Nicholas Sparks says: Who gives a f***.
.
There are several times throughout the book, you think, as a reader, Aw yes, that's "the choice" the title is referring to. But then a choice is made and the novel progresses. The more you think you know what exactly "The Choice" is, the farther away you are from the true obstacle of this novel. And you don't even get it until, like, the last 1/5 of the book.
.
In fact, about 2/3 of this book deals with the short period of time in which Travis and Gabby fall in love. The second part (as Sparks so kindly labels "Part Two") flashes forward ELEVEN YEARS where the reader is slewn into the middle of a new, or rather, futuristic problem.
.
Let's just say, I did not like this. At ALL. I already knew the couple would fall in love, but did he have to spend more than half of the novel showing us that? I wasn't even fully convinced, to be quite honest. I mean, can you really love someone after spending only a few days with them? Of course, Nicholas Sparks does live in a completely different world than us - his is perfect.
.
Though the ending to this book was nice - and typical of Sparks - I felt the overall structure was very badly done. I'm not sure if I would have liked to see more pages to fill out the middle area that got skipped, or just less of the beginning. It was a fairly short novel in itself. Something tells me Sparks was feeling rushed with this one. That, or his 5 kids were driving him so bonkers that he couldn't think straight enough to write a coherently structured book.
.
Ah, well. At least there's comfort in knowing Sparks will be releasing another novel some time this fall; and hopefully he'll have had a little more time to flesh this one out. We can only hope.

No comments:
Post a Comment