Flat-Out Love is a warm and witty novel of family love and dysfunction, deep heartache and raw vulnerability, with a bit of mystery and one whopping, knock-you-to-your-knees romance.
Something is seriously off in the Watkins home. And Julie Seagle, college freshman,
small-town Ohio transplant, and the newest resident of this Boston house, is
determined to get to the bottom of it.
When Julie’s off-campus housing falls through, her
mother’s old college roommate, Erin Watkins, invites her to move in. The
parents, Erin and Roger, are welcoming, but emotionally distant and
academically driven to eccentric extremes. The middle child, Matt, is an MIT
tech geek with a sweet side … and the social skills of a spool of USB cable.
The youngest, Celeste, is a frighteningly bright but freakishly fastidious
13-year-old who hauls around a life-sized cardboard cutout of her oldest brother
almost everywhere she goes.
And there’s that oldest brother, Finn: funny,
gorgeous, smart, sensitive, almost emotionally
available. Geographically? Definitely unavailable. That’s because Finn is traveling
the world and surfacing only for random Facebook chats, e-mails, and status
updates. Before long, through late-night exchanges of disembodied text, he
begins to stir something tender and
silly and maybe even a little bit sexy in Julie’s suddenly lonesome soul.
To Julie, the emotionally scrambled members of the
Watkins family add up to something that … well … doesn’t quite add up. Not
until she forces a buried secret to the surface, eliciting a dramatic
confrontation that threatens to tear the fragile Watkins family apart, does she
get her answer.
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