Customer Rating:      Summary: Best yet Comment: As I have read all of Georgia's published work I am confident in saying that her writing is maturing and this is by far her best to date...The story is more involved with some surpises...Can't wait for her next book in the spring!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Another Super Story from the 2006 Lambda Literary Award Winner Comment: As always from this author we are treated to gentle humor tinged at times with a delightful sarcasm.
35 year old Courtney's story of loss and recovery rings true to life. She is sweet and funny and deserves all the best in life.
43 year old Rachel has a fascinating and complex back story dating back 25 years. Her feelings for her father are real and honest.
I love the attention to detail with scene and locations, supporting friends and family.
from the publisher's website: What happens when you've already given your heart and love finds you again?
Three years after Courtney McAllister loses her partner in a car accident, she's finally trying to move forward. She's even dated half-heartedly over the past year, but no one is able to penetrate her emotional barricades until she meets aggressive real estate broker Rachel Hart. Despite Rachel's cool façade, Courtney is drawn to her--when she isn't furious with her. Still, despite an undeniable attraction, Courtney has given her heart once and doesn't have room for that kind of love in her life again. Rachel isn't looking for love, especially not with a woman who belongs to someone else, and taking second place has never been her long suit.
Don't miss the author's other novels:
Turning the Page
Fresh Tracks
Too Close to Touch
Thy Neighbor's Wife
Finding Home - coming in June 2008
Customer Rating:      Summary: Beers Does it Again Comment: Take two seemingly incompatible women, throw them together and mix well. Georgia Beers is always able to create a fresh, fantastic story from this simple recipe. `Mine' is certainly no exception to this rule.
For the last three years, Courtney McAllister has lived alone in the semi-remote home she purchased with her late partner. However, after repeated badgering from her friends, Courtney decides to sell and move closer to town and the dating scene. Upon first meeting her realtor Rachel Hart, Courtney reacts badly when told to remove personal mementos - especially those of her partner - from the home. In fact, she goes so far as to throw the realtor out. Embarrassed, Courtney eventually apologizes and invites Rachel back for another try.
Eventually the house sells, but both women find themselves uncharacteristically reaching out to each other and a strong bond forms. That is, except that Courtney is still emotionally `owned' by her late partner. Rachel has to decide if waiting for Courtney is worth the trouble, but in reality the decision is out of her hands.
These characters are extremely well developed and likable, the story is built in many complex layers, and the writing is easy to follow. That, in and of itself, makes the book worth reading. However, Beers' talent as an author makes this one worth a permanent place in my personal collection.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Romance with Substance Comment: From the eye-catching cover, appropriately named title, to the last word, Georgia Beers' Mine is captivating, thought-provoking, and satisfying. Like a deep red, smooth-tasting, and expensive merlot, Mine goes down easy even though Beers explores tough topics. There's no question that losing the love of your life is a difficult journey.
In Beers' acknowledgments, of the many people that she thanks, two women stand out. First is her friend Erin, who "gave me free rein to pick her brain as well as her heart so I could try to understand the issues, emotional roadblocks, and internal doubts and questions a young widow must face." She also thanks Sue "for all the insight, information, and education on bereavement groups, what they do, and how they're run." Beers weaves her romance around these issues by creating the character Courtney McAllister, who learns firsthand that widowhood is hard and unfair and that grieving goes through many phases. Initially she is trapped in the past and paralyzed with her dead wife's memory, but she struggles toward healing. Mine explores Courtney's hopes and fears in rich detail. It is cathartic to go through the process with her because, even if you have never experienced it, you can empathize with the pain and suffering of those left behind.
Beers balances this rather untraditional subject matter for a romance with the more familiar theme that life does go on. While selling her dream home, Courtney meets the ice queen realtor Rachel Hart, "Million Dollar Producer." Rachel is a control freak and a savvy businesswoman. In order to sustain her perfectly ordered life, she is meticulous in every way. Keeping up appearances and maintaining her distance let her avoid dealing with raw emotions or hurt feelings about her past. Both women have a lot of baggage, and it is instructive to watch as they empty their suitcases one item at a time.
The novel ends happily, as all romances do, but Beers' exploration of the grieving process adds a depth that is unusual in this genre. I enjoyed the witty dialogue. In this example, Rachel takes Courtney to an animal shelter and is hardly aware of the double meaning behind her words:
"It must be hard," Courtney grimaced, "seeing all the strays and animals people have abandoned."
"It is. It can be horrific. Believe me, there are times when I just want to beat the crap out of some people. But Happy Acres has a no-kill policy, which is very unusual, so if nothing else, I don't worry that these animals here have time limits" (p. 99).
The strong supporting cast and spot-on characterizations further enhance the story. Courtney's best friend Amelia is smart and sassy and essentially helps her friend to live again. Mark, Theresa's brother, is Courtney's rock and vice versa because they share the loss but gain strength from each other. Even Lisa from the bereavement group has a place in this novel where secondary and tertiary characters count but don't overshadow the main characters. Rachel has Jeff to help her discover what she already knows. Beers throws in a couple of surprises to keep you on your toes and is clever at exploring more than one type of healing.
This is more than simply a feel-good romance; it's a romance with substance. Georgia Beers won the 2006 Lambda Literary Foundation Award for Lesbian Romance and the 2007 Golden Crown Literary Award for Fresh Tracks. In this novel, you will make Mine yours and achieve a better understanding of the issues, emotional turmoil, and inner conflicts that a young widow faces. You will also be enriched because you did. Review first published at http://www.storycirclebookreviews.org/reviews/mine.shtml
Customer Rating:      Summary: Not perfect, but delightful just the same Comment: Above-average: 3-1/2 stars. My issues with this book are mostly quibbles (e.g. the author used the phrase "self-deprecating" too much), but I like Georgia Beers' voice, and care with her characters' emotions.
I'll start with the bad and end with the good. There was some inconsistency, or lost opportunity, or perhaps it was just some odd choices on the author's part, on which scenes are presented to the reader, and which are referred to after the fact. For instance, there's an initial scene where Courtney and Rachel ride to Happy Acres together on an early date (surely I'm not giving a plot point away there) in which they apparently make one another laugh several times. This is something you'd even think would be a key scene, particularly since Courtney makes it such a point later to enjoy Rachel's *smile* and vow to make it appear more often. Most of the characterization supports the fact that making Rachel relax and smile is a significant accomplishment early on, which makes the "easy" laughter in the car all the more surprising and confusing as it was glossed over.
There were other times/events that were sparsely described or glossed over that I question as a wise choice of the author, particularly when compared to those dwelt upon, especially when those we sometimes got a lot of detail about had no further impact on the plot, or ended up being left as a loose end. In some ways it made the pacing seem a little uneven. Or perhaps it was just the book overall that was loose, with not all things being tied up as they happened, but rather serving their purpose then being discarded for new events. In particular, for instance, it made me uneasy to have so much potential for something creepy or dire to develop in relation to Courtney, particularly with all the odd encounters Courtney had, plus the discussion of her gun. What was up with that? Was it just in her head due to paranoia brought on by dealing with grief and a single life?
But the book, to Georgia's credit, stayed firmly focused on family and the development of the central relationship. There were many sweet and poignant moments. Sometimes the prose slipped into cliches, especially in the dialogue, but these instances were brief, and we all speak in cliches at times, so why can't characters, right?
This is my 2nd Georgia Beers book, and despite my nit-picking I like her style. She handles her characters with a gentle hand, yet doesn't shy away from the tough emotions. Her characters here had pasts that strongly dictated who they were, yet their relationship also allowed them to open up more to live life more fully, in the present. Plus they had good friends to kick them in the butt as necessary, and that's generally a refreshing way to move a plot along. Despite its flaws and loose ends this book was life-affirming and a touching read.
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