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Flirting with Pete
Barbara Delinsky

Scribner Book Company, 2003

average customer review:based on 42 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended





Delinsky's best by far!

Flirting with Pete is definitely one of the most memorable books I've ever read. Lent to me by a friend, I was sort of reluctant to pick it up. It looked like a fluff romance novel, and I'd never heard of Barbara Delinsky. But I picked it up one night, and wasn't able to put it down again until I'd turned the last page! This is a fantastic story of discovery, loss, pain, and sharing. I'm so glad I began my acquaintance with Delinsky's work over this book. I highly recommend it (yes guys, you can read it too, it's not a fluffy romance novel).

I've since read several more Delinsky novels. This is the best one, by a long shot!


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Reading a great story

Great two stories in one. Typical love and drama. Great reading









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A story of Love and Tragedy

What do you get when you have a psychologist, a deputy, a gardener, a maid, a sexually and emotionally abused girl; a mother in a comatose state, a father you never knew that just died, a townhouse given to you by this father and a manuscript that you believe to be true? You get a wonderful and intriguing story that is hard to stop listening to.

Casey Ellis is the psychologist and she has inherited her father's townhouse worth $3 million. With her mother in a coma from a tragic accident, Casey tries to come to terms with her life. Finding a manuscript among her father's papers, Casey believes the story to be true and begins a search to discover if she is right.

The townhouse comes with a gardener, Jordan, and a maid, Meg, both of which her father's will asks her to keep on. Jordan keeps the garden alive with blooms and also triggers a bloom in Casey's heart. Meg is a wonderful cook and fills Casey's body with good food. Between them, they ground Casey and help her settle in the townhouse.

Ms Delinsky writes with twists and turns that keep you wanting to listen to more. Just when you think you have things figured out, Barbara throws another idea in. This keeps your interest high and the story alive. The tragedies she writes of are all too true in today's society which makes them all the more real and alive.

The reader, Linda Emond, is easy to listen to. She doesn't use a really deep voice to represent the men in the story, yet you know who is talking. The female voices are easier to tell who is talking as she gives them more distinctive inflections which would be easier as she is female herself.

I highly recommend picking up a copy of FLIRTING WITH PETE and settle in for a good evening of listening enjoyment.


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Reading Pleasure

I thoroughly enjoyed reading this novel. It drew me into the story from the beginning. The characters are very believable.

Jenny/MaryBeth - A troubled woman who had been physically abused by her mother and mentally and sexually abused by her father. Her struggles of day to day life make you empathize with her. Even when she becomes delusional and commits suicide... Or did it happen at all?

Casey - Her mother was hit by a car 3 years ago and was in a comatose state. Her father died and she never got a chance to know him, much less even speak to him in person. So why after his death did he leave her his townhouse?

Connie - The father Casey never knew while he was alive. Though he is dead, he is a major character in this book. The relationship between him and Casey forms beautifully proceeding his death. Why didn't he reach out to her when he was alive?

Caroline - Casey's mother. Casey visits her often in the care facility and in her mind has conversations with her. Most of them make her feel guilt... Or is it Casey refusing to let go of the guilt?

Jordan - The mysterious and sexy gardener. Bet you can figure out what part he plays in the story?! Well, he does actually... But so much more also.

Meg - The upbeat house keeper. Always full of questions, always full of spirit. Is it a facade though?

Pete - The man so perfect that you wonder right from meeting him whether he's real or not. Is he too good to be true?

I read the prologue and was a little disappointed that I did. As I began reading the book, I was still wondering about the characters in the prologue. When I was introduced to the characters, I immediately started trying to figure the book out. I knew instantly the mysteries that were being questioned as well as who it was. I was a little disappointed about that.

The story did have some pleasantly unexpected twists though. I kept turning page after page and wasn't disappointed for the most part. I will say that I felt a little let down at the end. I wanted to know more. I originally came on Amazon to see if there was a second book to this. But there's not as far as I can tell. So I'm left wondering what about Meg? I feel a bit as if the story started focused on one character, but ended focused on another. Although that isn't the case, I can't help but feel a little cheated nonetheless.

I do recommend reading Flirting with Pete. It was a good story and an easy read.


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reviews: page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9



In Flirting with Pete, bestselling author Barbara Delinsky weaves together two fascinating narratives that merge in a dramatic, highly emotional, and totally unexpected conclusion, as a daughter's struggle to win the approval of the father she never knew becomes a journey of self-discovery.


Casey Ellis has arrived at a lonely place in her life. Her mother remains in a comatose state several years after a terrible accident -- and now her father has died.

Although Casey didn't really know him -- never met him, in fact -- she had held out an oblique hope that someday this man, Dr. Cornelius Unger, a celebrated psychologist, might acknowledge her. In an attempt to please him, she even went into his field and became a counselor, to no avail.

It comes as a shock, therefore, when she learns that he has left her his beautiful townhouse in Boston's exclusive Beacon Hill section. She is of half a mind to sell it and use the money to care for her mother, but then she visits the townhouse and finds it enchanting. In fact, any chance she might have had of resisting the house is lost when she falls in love with the hidden garden out back. Sweetening the deal is the maid, a woman close to her age, who cooks and cleans and wants only to please her; and the gardener, a man who is as enigmatic as he is handsome.

Yet always in Casey's mind is the question of why Cornelius Unger chose to acknowledge her in this way. Sensing that he had an ulterior motive, she searches the house and finds the first part of a manuscript that could be a novel, a journal, or a case study of one of her father's clients. The manuscript tells the harrowing story of a young woman named Jenny who was sexually abused by her father and emotionally abused by her mother. When her mother was murdered, her father was sent to prison. Now, after only six years in jail, he is about to be released, and Jenny knows she has to escape. Her way out appears in the form of a mysterious stranger, a dream of a man named Pete, who shows up on his motorcycle and offers to whisk her away.

Convinced the story is true -- even more, that her father has left this manuscript as a message for her -- Casey sets out to find the rest of the pages. With the discovery of each additional segment, she learns more about Jenny, about herself, and about Cornelius Unger, who she realizes has planned this journey for her, actually begun the first day she set foot in his house. The manuscript proves to be the key to understanding not only her father's past but also that of the man she has come to love.

Flirting with Pete reaches its climax with a startling twist, one that explores the role of imagination in our everyday lives. Through Jenny's story, Casey gains insight into her own life as she vacillates between what she wants to be true and what actually is. With unflinching grace, Barbara Delinsky delves into the human psyche as it colors contemporary family life. Flirting with Pete is sure to touch a personal chord with readers and win her even more dedicated fans.


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