Tuesday Night at the Blue Moon
by
Debbie Fuller Thomas
Order:
USA
Can
Moody, 2008 (2008)
Paperback
Reviewed by Leslie McKee
W
hen Andie Lockhart lost her parents, she believed that was the worst thing that could possibly happen to her. She was left to be raised by her loving grandparents. Her familiar world was torn apart yet again when she learned that the people she had called her parents were not really her parents.
A
fter losing Ginger, her daughter, to a rare genetic disorder, Marty Winslow learns that Andie is her biological daughter. It turns out that Andie and Ginger had accidentally been switched at birth.
F
orced to leave the only remaining family members she has ever known, Andie goes to live with Marty and her daughters (Winnie and Deja). While Winnie is very welcoming, that is not the case with Deja. They are finding it hard to accept that she is not Ginger. Andie already feels a bit abandoned and now she feels unwanted. She is sure that even God has forgotten her. Can Andie and the Winslows accept the new arrangement thrust upon them?
T
he writing in
Tuesday Night at the Blue Moon
is passionate and the characters are thoroughly engrossing, both of which make for an engaging story. It contains universal themes of moving past difficult times and embracing the future.
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