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Sunrise Point

por Robyn Carr

Otros autores: Ver la sección otros autores.

Series: Virgin River (17)

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
5122247,655 (3.95)7
Fiction. Romance. HTML:

Former marine Tom Cavanaugh has come home to Virgin River, ready to take over his family's apple orchard and settle down. He knows just what the perfect woman will be like: sweet, decent, maybe a little naive. The marrying kind.
Nothing like Nora Crane. So why can't he keep his eyes off the striking single mother?
Nora may not have finished college, but she graduated with honors from the school of hard knocks. She's been through tough times and she'll do whatever it takes to support her family, including helping with harvest time at the Cavanaughs' orchard. She's always kept a single-minded focus on staying afloat...but suddenly her thoughts keep drifting back to rugged, opinionated Tom Cavanaugh.
Both Nora and Tom have their own ideas of what family means. But they're about to prove each other completely wrong....
Look for What We Find by Robyn Carr, a powerful story of healing, new beginnings and one woman's journey to finding the happiness she's long been missing. Order your copy today!

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Mostrando 1-5 de 22 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
Sunrise Point is the seventeenth full-length book in Robyn Carr’s Virgin River series. It features Tom Cavanaugh who was introduced much earlier in the series as a teenager if I’m remembering correctly, but he’s been away serving in the Marines for a number of years. He only recently returned to Virgin River to help his grandmother run the family apple orchard. He’s paired with Nora, a more recent addition to the series, who is a single mother with a troubled past. Nora is desperate to earn some cash to take care of her two daughters, so when she sees a job posting for seasonal apple pickers, she goes to the orchard to apply. Tom is reluctant to hire her, thinking she isn’t strong enough for the job, but his grandmother overrules him and hires her anyway. While working hard to prove herself, Nora becomes friends with Tom and an attraction forms between them. But Nora is busy trying to keep her little family afloat financially and she’s certain that a hottie like Tom wouldn’t want a single mom with baggage. Although he likes Nora, Tom thinks that he wants a more stable woman with less responsibilities, so he takes up a casual relationship with the widow of a marine he served with in Afghanistan, only to find out that looks can be deceiving and that sometimes what we think we want and what we genuinely need are two very different things.

Nora barely remembers her father. She grew up with a single mom who was emotionally abusive and who told her that her father abandoned them and was a horrible, abusive person himself. By the time she was in her first year of college, Nora got into a relationship with a minor league baseball player who she found out too late was involved in drugs. After living in a series of slums, her boyfriend brought her to Virgin River where he abandoned her and their two tiny daughters. Alone with no money, Nora had no idea what to do, but her neighbors in the small mountain town pulled together to help her get back on her feet. However, there’s not a lot of work to be found in such a small community, so when she sees the ad for apple pickers, she knows she has to apply even though the orchard is over three miles away and she has no car. After Tom’s grandmother, Maxie, hires her, she pulls out all the stops to prove that she’s an incredibly hard worker and worthy of the trust placed in her. Because of there being a mother bear and her three cubs on the loose near town, Tom insists on giving her a ride, and during this time, they slowly become friends. Nora finds herself longing for more between them, but she’s a practical woman who knows she’s no catch compared to Tom’s new lady friend and that she comes with extra responsibilities. But when Tom finally shows an interest in being more than just friends, she can’t resist. Nora is a very sympathetic character who’s down on her luck. She’s a wonderful mother to her two daughters and would literally do anything to keep them safe and fed. I liked that she was able to reconnect with her father and learn that he wasn’t the bad guy she’d been led to believe all her life and that he ended up being a huge support in her time of need. I also liked that she fell in love not only with Tom but with Maxie and the orchard too, showing that she was a perfect match for him.

Tom’s father died when he was a kid and his mother abandoned him, so he was raised by Maxie in Virgin River. After his stint in the Marines, he returned to take up the apple farming business, and it’s his first harvest since being home. When Nora comes through his door, looking for work, he’s instantly attracted to her, but he’s sure that this tiny woman would never be able to keep up with the other pickers. Then Maxie insists on giving her a chance, and as Nora shows what a good worker she really is, Tom gradually warms up to her. But even though he likes her, he’s convinced that he wants a woman with less baggage. That’s why when Darla, the widow of an old Marine buddy, comes to visit, he starts casually dating her. He thinks she’s everything he wants in a woman, beautiful, sleek, and sophisticated with no kids or other encumbrances, but every weekend she comes to the orchard to visit, he begins to see more and more of her flaws. As Darla becomes less attractive, Nora becomes more so, but he’s still a little resistant to the idea of instant fatherhood and all of the other baggage Nora carries. When unexpected events lead to Nora’s imminent move away from Virgin River, Tom finally realizes exactly what he’d be missing. I liked Tom way back when he was first introduced to the series as a young man and I still liked him now. He’s maybe a bit clueless when it comes to what he really needs in a woman and he takes his good sweet time going after Nora, but he eventually figures it out and gets there. He’s a good guy who finally found the perfect woman for him.

Like many of these latter Virgin River books, Sunrise Point didn’t really reach many emotional highs or lows. It’s kind of what I like to call a pleasant, easy, rainy-day type read that stays on an even keel throughout. The final couple of chapters where Tom finally gets his act together were a little more emotionally charged. Early on, I was a bit disappointed because Tom and Nora seem to just be in the friend zone, while he’s romancing another woman. I tend to be a rather jealous reader who doesn’t like my heroes and heroines to be involved with other people once they meet each other. However, this was really the primary conflict for a large part of the story. I grudgingly admit that it kept me reading, wondering when and how Tom was finally going to figure out that Darla was all wrong for him, and at least the one saving grace is that they never slept together. But still, I couldn’t help feeling like it took valuable time away from him getting to know Nora better. Luckily the author does make up for that somewhat during the final third of the book, so it ended up being a pretty good read in spite of my early misgivings. As is typical for this series, many of the Virgin River townspeople put in appearances, and Hank Cooper, one of the cornerstone characters in Robyn Carr’s Thunder Point series was introduced here. He’s friends with Luke Riordan and has a surprising connection to Jack that led to some uncharacteristic tension between the two men. Sunrise Point didn’t quite make it to the pinnacle of perfection for me, but I did enjoy it and can recommend it to fans of the series or of small town romances in general. ( )
  mom2lnb | Aug 21, 2021 |
Please note that I gave this book 2.5 stars and rounded it up to 3 stars on Goodreads.

You can’t see my face, but my face is just still right now. This was the next to the last book in the Virgin River series and it was such a letdown. I think that having it be about a character we heard about here and there from the previous books was the main issue. I had no interest in Nora from the previous books and I was wondering why she kept popping up. Also Nora being 23 and like I think 5 feet with two kids and her being attracted to Tom didn’t work. Probably because based on what I read, Tom had to be at least in his late 30s or early 40s. There is no real tension in this book either, it’s just reading about two people kind of doing their own thing but slowly becoming attracted to each other. When we do get a love scene I maybe sort of yawned my way through it. We once again get an epilogue in this book that I was surprised to see. It didn’t really work for me, but oh well.

Nora is a single mother with two little kids doing her best to keep her head afloat. She goes looking for work at Tom’s family’s apple orchard. He initially turns her away thinking she is too young and small to be able to do much good, but his grandmother makes him hire her. Nora starts to think of Tom romantically, but tries not to when he starts dating another woman.

Tom. Eh. He is a former Marine (mostly all of the men in Virgin River are former Marines. Thinks about it, yes I think they are) who is determined to meet and marry a “classy woman”. He decides that type of woman he is looking for is a widow of a friend of his that died in Afghanistan. At least Tom realizes this woman is completely selfish and she and he would not make a good match, but I did get a kick out of his grandmother ready and waiting to throw this woman out of their shared home.

We have references to previous characters per usual. But there is not really a B plot in this book at all. The majority of the book is dealing with Nora and Tom and Nora has a whole host of things going on.

I think the romance was lacking as I already said because I didn’t really get a sense while reading that these two were hot and bothered for each other. Nora was mostly like a little sister to Tom through the whole book so maybe that is why I found it jarring. ( )
  ObsidianBlue | Jul 1, 2020 |
This book was another great Virgin River book. In each of these books, there are issues as well as the romance. In this one, the main character, Nora, has had a hard life. One of her problems is the way she was raised, by a borderline mother. The memories from her childhood were exceedingly hard for me to read, since my mother was a borderline. It was amazing to see it incorporated into a mainstream romance novel.

As with many other Virgin River books, this book is about people who want to get married and have children, and the introduction of children into someone's life causes them to like children. This is the part that I find unrealistic about the VR series, and if you find such things offensive, you won't want to read most of what Robyn Carr has written. It's interesting to me, however, that in many other ways I find the characters more real than in the standard romance. Also note: these books have some graphic sexual scenes.

I really have enjoyed the books, and I do recommend the series, and this book in particular, if you don't mind the above warnings. I recommend reading them in order. This one is the most recent one.



( )
  mirihawk | May 21, 2020 |
Tom Cavanaugh returns to the family apple orchard after a stint in the Marines. Strangely, the previous girlfriend, Brenda from previous books is just dropped by the author. But she introduces Nora, a single Mom trying to keep her family afloat. She gets a job picking apples, backbreaking labor, after walking 3 miles each way in all kinds of weather. But although she's nothing like what Tom envisions in a wife, Nora captures his attention. And his grandmother, Maxie, and the rest of the town is determined to get Nora and her family back on their feet. ( )
  nancynova | Nov 8, 2017 |
Because you like Romance, you may like Robyn Carr. This is a sweet love story about finding happiness and love and healing and new beginnings.
  mcmlsbookbutler | Mar 10, 2017 |
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Plummer, ThérèseReaderautor principalalgunas edicionesconfirmado
Alberstat, MichaelAuthor Photoautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado

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Fiction. Romance. HTML:

Former marine Tom Cavanaugh has come home to Virgin River, ready to take over his family's apple orchard and settle down. He knows just what the perfect woman will be like: sweet, decent, maybe a little naive. The marrying kind.
Nothing like Nora Crane. So why can't he keep his eyes off the striking single mother?
Nora may not have finished college, but she graduated with honors from the school of hard knocks. She's been through tough times and she'll do whatever it takes to support her family, including helping with harvest time at the Cavanaughs' orchard. She's always kept a single-minded focus on staying afloat...but suddenly her thoughts keep drifting back to rugged, opinionated Tom Cavanaugh.
Both Nora and Tom have their own ideas of what family means. But they're about to prove each other completely wrong....
Look for What We Find by Robyn Carr, a powerful story of healing, new beginnings and one woman's journey to finding the happiness she's long been missing. Order your copy today!

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