![]() Daisy doesn't have the money needed for childcare so she plans to appeal to Jack's family. Its 2 years after Jack wandered away from Daisy and San Francisco - and Daisy has the chance to study and tour with a famous, retired singer of renown. Unfortunately for her, Jack left before finding out he was to be a father. ![]() Jack has loved and left saloon-singer, Daisy. I understand these characters better than most of my extended family! ![]() After almost 1200 pages (3 books combined), I KNOW what makes these folks tick, what they worry over and how they react to adversaries. I don't think I've read a series I've enjoyed more. I don't think I saw that clearly in the first reading. Re-reading the third book, I was able to see Warner's craft - she carefully brought Jack through a metamorphosis from shallow youngster to a man of substance. Unlike Brady or Hank (Jack's brothers and main characters in the previous 2 books), Jack seemed to be a loose cannon, committed only to having a good time. The story of Jack and Daisy seemed like the weak part of the series. ![]() I particularly liked the fact that Warner used main characters of the previous series books to play a large part in this book. Often, authors use the last few pages (for this) and the summary seems like a quick addendum, not really woven into the story. I was delighted that Warner used this entire book to summarize the lives of the characters. This entire series has been enthralling this is my second time to read the 3 books. ![]()
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