Sabtu, 25 Januari 2014

[R414.Ebook] Ebook Whiskey and Charlie, by Annabel Smith

Ebook Whiskey and Charlie, by Annabel Smith

Getting guides Whiskey And Charlie, By Annabel Smith now is not type of difficult way. You can not simply going for book shop or collection or loaning from your pals to review them. This is a very easy way to specifically obtain the e-book by on-line. This online e-book Whiskey And Charlie, By Annabel Smith can be one of the options to accompany you when having spare time. It will not waste your time. Think me, the publication will show you brand-new thing to read. Just spend little time to open this on the internet publication Whiskey And Charlie, By Annabel Smith and also read them wherever you are now.

Whiskey and Charlie, by Annabel Smith

Whiskey and Charlie, by Annabel Smith



Whiskey and Charlie, by Annabel Smith

Ebook Whiskey and Charlie, by Annabel Smith

Just how if your day is started by checking out a book Whiskey And Charlie, By Annabel Smith However, it remains in your gadget? Everybody will certainly still touch and us their device when waking up and also in early morning tasks. This is why, we mean you to also read a book Whiskey And Charlie, By Annabel Smith If you still puzzled the best ways to obtain guide for your gadget, you could adhere to the method here. As right here, we offer Whiskey And Charlie, By Annabel Smith in this web site.

Certainly, to boost your life quality, every e-book Whiskey And Charlie, By Annabel Smith will have their particular driving lesson. Nonetheless, having certain understanding will make you really feel much more certain. When you feel something happen to your life, often, reviewing e-book Whiskey And Charlie, By Annabel Smith can help you to make tranquility. Is that your actual hobby? Occasionally of course, but occasionally will certainly be uncertain. Your choice to review Whiskey And Charlie, By Annabel Smith as one of your reading publications, can be your correct e-book to check out now.

This is not around just how much this publication Whiskey And Charlie, By Annabel Smith costs; it is not likewise concerning just what kind of e-book you actually like to read. It is for what you can take and obtain from reviewing this Whiskey And Charlie, By Annabel Smith You can like to decide on various other publication; but, it matters not if you attempt to make this e-book Whiskey And Charlie, By Annabel Smith as your reading option. You will not regret it. This soft file book Whiskey And Charlie, By Annabel Smith can be your buddy regardless.

By downloading this soft data book Whiskey And Charlie, By Annabel Smith in the on-line web link download, you are in the primary step right to do. This site really supplies you simplicity of ways to obtain the very best publication, from finest vendor to the brand-new launched e-book. You can find much more books in this site by seeing every link that we give. Among the collections, Whiskey And Charlie, By Annabel Smith is one of the very best collections to market. So, the very first you obtain it, the very first you will get all favorable about this book Whiskey And Charlie, By Annabel Smith

Whiskey and Charlie, by Annabel Smith

"A sharp, perceptive novel about family and forgiveness, Whiskey & Charlie will stay with me for a very long time." Christina Baker Kline, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Orphan Train

With the poignancy of Tell the Wolves I'm Home and the fraught tension of The Burgess Boys, Whiskey and Charlie is a captivating novel of brothers who have drifted apart-and the accident that will determine their future. Told as a seesaw of hope and fear, this novel explores the dark truths about what family really means to us.

Whiskey and Charlie might have come from the same family, but they'd tell you two completely different stories about growing up. Whiskey is everything Charlie is not ― bold, daring, carefree ― and Charlie blames his twin brother for always stealing the limelight, always getting everything, always pushing Charlie back. By the time the twins reach adulthood, they are barely even speaking to each other.

When they were just boys, the secret language they whispered back and forth over their crackly walkie-talkies connected them, in a way. The two-way alphabet (alpha, bravo, charlie, delta) became their code, their lifeline. But as the brothers grew up, they grew apart.

When Charlie hears that Whiskey has been in a terrible accident and has slipped into a coma, Charlie can't make sense of it. Who is he without Whiskey? As days and weeks slip by and the chances of Whiskey recovering grow ever more slim, Charlie is forced to consider that he may never get to say all the things he wants to say. A compelling and unforgettable novel about rivalry and redemption, Whiskey & Charlie is perfect for anyone whose family has ever been less than picture-perfect.

"A finely crafted novel that keeps us reading because we care about the characters. It's a terrific book."―Graeme Simsion, New York Times bestselling author of The Rosie Project and The Rosie Effect

  • Sales Rank: #231152 in Books
  • Brand: Smith, Annabel
  • Published on: 2015-04-07
  • Released on: 2015-04-07
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 7.43" h x .88" w x 5.61" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 336 pages

Review
"Whiskey & Charlie is a clever, beautifully written book that pulls at the heartstrings and adeptly intertwines past and present." - Lori Nelson Spielman, author of The Life List

"Roiling with heart and soul, Whiskey & Charlie is a cleverly-written journey through the maze of family relationships. With her talent for nailing honest emotions, Annabel Smith draws you into her tale with a deft hand. By the end, you'll long to call your siblings and repair any petty squabbles." - Mary Hogan, author of Two Sisters

"A powerful, emotionally riven tale of a brother's deep, complicated love." - Kirkus

"satisfying, heart-wrenching." - Booklist

"We unanimously loved this novel, which rarely happens... We cared about the characters and couldn't put it down!" - Woman's Day

About the Author
Annabel Smith holds a PhD in writing. She lives in Perth, Australia, with her husband and son.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Alpha

Looking back, Charlie Ferns thinks it began when they were nine years old, the year his mother's sister Audrey moved to Australia. It was a Saturday morning, just like any other, when she came over to tell them. Charlie's father was playing squash; Whiskey, who was still William then, was upstairs. He was supposed to be practicing his trombone, but he was rebuilding his Scalextric track instead. Charlie knew this because he had gone upstairs to get his Star Wars figurines, and he had seen William kneeling on their bedroom floor with all the pieces of track out of the box, his trombone in the corner, still inside its case.

"Don't tell Mum," William said. Charlie shrugged. He knew his mother would work it out soon enough when she didn't hear William sliding up and down his scales. She was sharp like that. But on this particular day, his mother was distracted by what his aunt was saying.

Charlie wasn't listening at first. He was absorbed in orchestrating a furious light saber battle between Luke Skywalker and Darth Vader. It wasn't until he realized that his aunt was doing all the talking, that his mother wasn't saying anything at all, that Charlie began to take notice. You see, his mother usually kept up her part in a conversation. Vivacious, that's what people said about her, and although Charlie didn't know what this meant exactly, he knew it had something to do with her talking and laughing a lot. Her silence was a bad sign. It usually meant one of two things: one, Charlie or William or, worse still, both of them had gone too far, or two, she had a bone to pick with their father.

"Your mother's upset, boys," their dad would say when their mother went silent on him, and they would leave the room, knowing an almighty argument was on the horizon.

"The calm before the storm," their father had joked to them once about their mother's silences, and they had laughed, guiltily, not really understanding, but knowing their mother would not find this joke funny. Charlie had never known his mother to go silent on anyone else. He stayed where he was, crouched on the floor beside the armchair, but he stopped the battle between the forces of good and evil and began to listen.

"I want to leave England, start all over again," his aunt was saying. "I want to go somewhere where people don't know me as Bob's widow, where they don't feel sorry for me or give me the cold shoulder because they blame me for his death. I want to go somewhere where nobody will even know what happened unless I tell them myself."

Charlie realized that both his aunt and his mother had forgotten he was there. None of the grown-ups ever talked about Uncle Bob's death when Charlie and William were around. They wouldn't have known anything at all if William hadn't overheard his mother on the phone, talking to her best friend, Suzanne. Bob had committed suicide, their mother told Suzanne, because Audrey confronted him about the other woman.

"Which other woman?" William had asked, but their mother had glared at him with such intensity that he had let it drop.

When they had asked their father about it later, he had snorted.

"Other woman?" he said. "That's a laugh. Other women, more like it."

This comment had left the boys no closer to understanding why it had happened, but their father did at least explain that committing suicide meant that Uncle Bob had killed himself, and he even told them how, explaining about the rope and his neck breaking before their mother overheard the conversation and stopped him by saying, "Could you occasionally engage your brain before opening your mouth?"

Charlie stayed absolutely still, thinking he might at last be able to solve the riddle of his uncle's death, and he felt a thrill go through him that he would be the one who found it out. He couldn't wait to tell William.

"You can understand that, can't you, Elaine?"

Audrey waited for her sister to answer, and in the silence, Charlie realized that his mother was crying. They had one of those shiny tablecloths you didn't have to wash-you could wipe it with a sponge-and Charlie could see his mother's tears sliding off her chin and dripping onto it, plip, plip.

"I'm not even forty yet," his aunt said, "but I feel like here my life's already over."

This comment was so surprising that Charlie forgot about his mum crying, or finding out the secret about Uncle Bob's death. Of course Charlie knew that Audrey was his mother's older sister. He had never known how much older, but if he had to guess, he would have said twenty years at least. In fact, Audrey seemed so much older that Charlie tended to think of her as his mother's mother, rather than as her sister. This thought was partly left over from when he was younger and hadn't been able to understand why other people had two grandmothers and he had only one. For a while he had pretended Audrey was his grandmother and not his aunt. He knew better now, of course, knew perfectly well that his mother's mother was dead, that she had died when he was three weeks old, and that's why he couldn't remember her at all. But his idea that Audrey was older had gotten stuck in his mind.

Once, his mother had shown Charlie a photo from Audrey's wedding, and Charlie could not believe the woman in the white dress in the center could possibly be his aunt. For some time afterward, he had tried to look for that skinny, pretty girl inside his aunt's soft and shapeless face, but he had never seen it, and after a while, he had forgotten to look. But he had asked his mother once how Audrey got so old. His mother had sighed, one of those big, long sighs she always gave when she talked about her sister.

"She's had a very hard life, Charlie."

To Charlie, a hard life was being a beggar, like in Oliver Twist, or your whole family sleeping in one bed, like in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. He did not understand how two people who lived in a big house with a golden retriever could have a hard life. Besides, he had heard his mother say lots of times how lucky Audrey was.

"You're too young to understand this now, Charlie, but it's been a great disappointment to Audrey, not being able to have children..." She trailed off. Charlie looked at her. She seemed to be looking at something in the mirror. "And then the cancer," she said, but she was not really talking to Charlie; she seemed to have forgotten he was there. "She was really very young to have a mastectomy," she added, to no one in particular.

Charlie put his Matchbox Ferrari on top of his mother's dressing table and made a revving sound. He didn't want to talk about that. His mother had explained it to him before they went to see Audrey in the hospital, and it gave him a tummyache to think about it.

"Why else?" he asked.

"Why else what?"

Charlie revved the car impatiently. "Why else is she so old?"

"Well, I don't know, Charlie, isn't that enough? But I don't suppose Bob's behavior has helped."

"Why?" Charlie asked. "What did Uncle Bob do?"

"Oh, Charlie, you wear me out with your questions," she said, suddenly coming to, and she started tidying the dressing table, which meant the conversation was over.

So Charlie had asked his dad, which was what he always did when his mother's explanations didn't satisfy him.

"Did Uncle Bob make Auntie Audrey old?" he asked.

"Who told you that?"

"Mum."

His dad looked like he was about to laugh. "I suppose you could explain it like that."

"But how did he?"

"How did he? I suppose by being unfaithful. I think that's what your mother means."

"What's ‘unfaithful'?"

"Well now, I suspect your mother might give me a thrashing if I told you that, boy. Nice try though, Charlie, nice try."

Unfaithful. It had sounded like something important, the way he had said it. Charlie had turned the word over in his mind. Faithful is what everyone always said about his granddad's dog, Tartan, because he always lay down at Granddad's feet and went everywhere with him, even sometimes on the tractor. But why would Audrey want Bob to lie down at her feet? Charlie hadn't been able to make sense of it, and William, who was smart with those sorts of things, hadn't been able to work it out either.

Thinking about it again, Charlie lost the thread of the conversation at the kitchen table. By the time he'd thought it all through, his mum had stopped crying.

"Australia! What an adventure, Audrey," she said as she put the teacups in the dishwasher. "I suppose we'll have to come out and see you there one day."

x x x

"Alpha and Omega," she said when she explained it to the boys. Sometimes their mother spoke like that-bits of other languages, odd lines from plays she had read. Their father said this was because she had a brain but she didn't really get to use it, that it just boggled away inside her head and sometimes funny things came out. She said to Charlie and William that Alpha meant the beginning and Omega was the end, and that for Audrey, moving to Australia was the end of one chapter and the beginning of another.

As well as being a new beginning for herself, in a way, Audrey's Omega was also Charlie's Alpha. Because before she left for Australia, she bought all of them lavish presents, the kinds of things they would never have bought for themselves. She took Elaine up to London to see Cats, a musical they both had on cassette tape and had wanted to see for years, and she bought their father a crystal brandy decanter.

But best of all, she bought Charlie and William the walkie-talkies, which were the beginning of everything.

Most helpful customer reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Brothers Forever
By KasaC
Charlie always regarded his older (by minutes) brother William as being the Alpha sibling. Always the more daring, ostensibly more charismatic, more attention-garnering of the two, it is clear from the beginning that this rivalry is the impetus that has always driven William. The boys are given a set of walkie talkies, and use the International phonetic alphabet as their code. When he points out Charlie's name is already a part of this code, William accepts when Charlie starts calling him Whiskey, which becomes his given name. As adults, they have become estranged, yet Charlie goes to hospital when summoned to his brother's bedside where Whiskey lies in a coma, and much of the book is about him coming to terms with his complicated feelings about his brother. Much is revealed, and Charlie, while the central character, does not always act in a manner to receive sympathy. His perceived relationships with both his brother and his girlfriend are not as straightforward as usual in books of this kind, making it a more complex story and initially thought.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Complex and interesting characters, some fun plot twists, and a unique approach to presentation.
By Darin
As someone who has always wished I had a twin, I was intrigued when this title came up in an ad on my Kindle. I'm glad I acted on the impulse and bought this book, as it was well worth it. Although I could not relate (thankfully) to the situation in this book, I could relate to Charlie, one of the twins. With this instant connection, I was taken in immediately and wanted to cheer him on to the end, hoping he would learn and grow.

The story is told in a very creative way, using the phonetic alphabet as chapter titles. It takes us from the twins' childhood, through their youth, and into adulthood up to the point of one of the twins being in a coma. The twin not involved in the accident, Charlie, must come to grips with the relationship he has (or doesn't have) with his brother, Whiskey. We become involved in their lives as we visit different events in their past that explain what has led up to things being the way they are. There are several surprises along the way that complicate matters, which makes the book even more interesting.

In many areas of the book, the author starts speaking of event or a person as though they have been mentioned before. For example, the accident itself is referred to as an accident, but it's not until later in the book that we find out what kind of accident it was. I like this literary device - I soon discovered that unexplained things would be explained soon enough, and I looked forward to finding out the missing piece.

I recommend this book to anyone, especially to those looking to heal a rift between family or even friends. And even more to those who have had to deal with (or are dealing with) a loved one in a coma. However, even if you don't fall in one of these categories, you will still enjoy this read.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Whiskey and Charlie
By C. Masters
What a great book. Twin boys Whiskey and Charlie grew up together, fell apart and a significant event happened to Whiskey which brought them together again. They both were introduced to another, brother Mike! This was a great story of relationships and family!

See all 318 customer reviews...

Whiskey and Charlie, by Annabel Smith PDF
Whiskey and Charlie, by Annabel Smith EPub
Whiskey and Charlie, by Annabel Smith Doc
Whiskey and Charlie, by Annabel Smith iBooks
Whiskey and Charlie, by Annabel Smith rtf
Whiskey and Charlie, by Annabel Smith Mobipocket
Whiskey and Charlie, by Annabel Smith Kindle

Whiskey and Charlie, by Annabel Smith PDF

Whiskey and Charlie, by Annabel Smith PDF

Whiskey and Charlie, by Annabel Smith PDF
Whiskey and Charlie, by Annabel Smith PDF

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar