44 Charles Street, by Danielle Steel, 2012, Dell (Random House)

44 Charles Street
44 Charles Street

44 Charles Street is set in an artsy district of New York. Francesca, the main character, loves art and is living out her dream as co-owner of a gallery in which she helps new artists get a start. However, her business and life partner wants out. He helped her get the gallery going for five years, and now, seeing that it still isn’t making money, he wants to return to his law career. He wants to sell the house and gallery and start a family.

Francesca lets him go and finds a way to keep her life in the home she loves. The tenants she rents rooms to turn out to be quite a variety of people. They learn to love each other as family, through thick and thin.

I like how the author portrays a variety of personalities in the story, and how they interact. Their backgrounds, desires, and expectations. The ways they care for one another.

This book is written in an older style, from the point of view of the author as she tells the story. We as readers catch glimpses into the feelings of characters as told by Steele. This is different from recent writing styles in which authors write only from the point of view of one character in each scene.

Personally, I don’t mind this older writing style. It’s easy to follow, and the settings, characters and story line are interesting. Steele portrays well the life, values, belief systems and cultures of the time. 44 Charles Street could lead to a great discussion for a book club.

Moral Compass, by Danielle Steel, 2020, Dell (Random House)

Moral Compass, by Danielle Steel
A high school rape–the circumstances and results.

Moral Compass, by Danielle Steel, addresses the topic of rape in the setting of an elite boarding school in the United States.

The novel starts out on the first day back to school in September, with faculty arriving and observing students and their parents unloading baggage from cars. Many characters are introduced and we learn that it’s the first year that the school is accepting female students. We don’t get into the action until chapter three, at Halloween.

The pace picks up quickly from there. Danielle Steel brings out the unique personalities of the characters vividly. Each person involved reacts differently to the incident, and there are many more people affected than one might think. Faculty, board members, parents, police, lawyers, and the students themselves. Which way will the dominoes fall? Each family of the students involved has their own sub-story, with surprising results.

The complex relationships between all the characters is very interesting. As a reader I learned a lot about how the American justice system works.

Moral Compass appealed to me as a parent, a former teacher, and women’s worker. So glad my son picked it out as a Christmas gift for me.

Buy 2 for $15 Select Cookbook Bargains

Check out the above affiliate link to Chapters/Indigo, and look for Moral Compass while you’re in there. If you purchase anything through my link, at no extra cost to you, it will help me keep my website running. Thank you, I hope you find something you like.