From the New York Times and internationally bestselling author of The Little Paris Bookshop, comes a delightful, offbeat, charming and bittersweet tale about the distance one man will travel for the sake of love and friendship.
Henri is about to meet his teenage son, Sam, for the first time. But as Henri crosses Hammersmith Bridge, an accident happens. Sam reads about it in the newspaper - his father is a hero, now in a coma in hospital. So their first meeting takes place there, alongside the hospitalâs neurologist, whom the staff name God and is the first person to treat Sam as an equal in intelligence. And thatâs because Sam, due to a condition called synaesthesia, can sense things the doctors canât - he can see the colours of his fatherâs thoughts and dreams, and many relationships build from this.
This beautiful novel is warm, wise, wry look at what love means. Itâs about fathers and sons, friendship and family, life, death and making peace with the past in order to find a future.
Praise for Nina Georgeâs novels:
âThis charming tale is already a bestseller in Germany. For fans of Like Water for Chocolate and AmelieâRed
âGeorge uses a heady cocktail of literature and more sensual pleasures to create a wonderfully offbeat romanceâ Mail on Sunday
âGlowing . . . layered with wit, enchanting writing and a love of booksâ Daily Mail
âA true gem for fiction loversâ Good Housekeeping
âA captivating curiosity, for those who still believe in love and books, friendship and food, happiness and romanceâ Saga
âA capricious, meandering journey of love, loss and wonderful food, so beautifully described. I enjoyed every momentâ Carole Matthews
âIf you're looking to be charmed right out of your own life for a few hours, sit down with this wise and winsome novel . . . Everything happens just as you want it to . . . from poignant moments to crystalline insights in exactly the right measureâ oprah.com
'An enchanting, uplifting read . . . the sort of book that acts as a soothing tonic as you read' Independent
'A life-affirming novel' Sunday Express