Author: | Jax Resto | ISBN: | 9781311490032 |
Publisher: | Jax Resto | Publication: | February 17, 2015 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition | Language: | English |
Author: | Jax Resto |
ISBN: | 9781311490032 |
Publisher: | Jax Resto |
Publication: | February 17, 2015 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition |
Language: | English |
A stand alone sequel to Too Much to Remember, Too Much to Forget takes a more serious turn than its comedic prequel. Though laced with some of the same humor, the story also journeys into the tragic past of the Kovak family. As young Joe Kovak prepares for his eighteenth birthday, he suffers pangs of a recent breakup, mixed emotions about his best friend's girlfriend Julie, and confusion over the odd jealousy he suddenly feels whenever he sees his friend Loki with her new boyfriend. But Joe's normal teenage angst fades into the background, when he begins having hauntingly vivid dreams about his deceased mother. With the return of a man named Robert LeClerc into his family's life, Joe finds himself wondering why it's taken him thirteen years to ask a crucial question. As his dreams become more frequent, and more vivid, Joe suspects that the reason he's never asked his father how his mom died, is because deep in his memories, he's always known, and has fought hard not to remember. But now, the memories of his mom, of how she lived—and how she died, are too much to forget.
A stand alone sequel to Too Much to Remember, Too Much to Forget takes a more serious turn than its comedic prequel. Though laced with some of the same humor, the story also journeys into the tragic past of the Kovak family. As young Joe Kovak prepares for his eighteenth birthday, he suffers pangs of a recent breakup, mixed emotions about his best friend's girlfriend Julie, and confusion over the odd jealousy he suddenly feels whenever he sees his friend Loki with her new boyfriend. But Joe's normal teenage angst fades into the background, when he begins having hauntingly vivid dreams about his deceased mother. With the return of a man named Robert LeClerc into his family's life, Joe finds himself wondering why it's taken him thirteen years to ask a crucial question. As his dreams become more frequent, and more vivid, Joe suspects that the reason he's never asked his father how his mom died, is because deep in his memories, he's always known, and has fought hard not to remember. But now, the memories of his mom, of how she lived—and how she died, are too much to forget.