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Steve Zettler
Author
Careless Love
Grace has gone to Hawaii to escape Southern California; with suicide very much on her mind. It’s 1979. Her philandering husband, Nick, a successful film director, has walked out on her and is carrying on yet another illicit affair. On Grace’s first night at Honolulu’s lush Pickering Club she meets Lee, a man who also has a need for escape. They recognize this bond immediately, along with an emotional and physical attraction that cannot be ignored. Enter Ray Slack, brutal and sadistic substance abuser. These parallel lives travel in close proximity. Lee and Ray have a connection of which neither is aware. In the span of four days, Grace and Lee fall deeply in love, overcoming the many obstacles that have been thrown in their path. But Ray and Lee are magnets. The same power that forced their lives to cross in Vietnam has come back to haunt them, and there is no escaping the collision course that has been mapped out for them.
Reviews
Writer/director/actor Zettler (author of the Joe Bradlee thrillers) wows in this fast-paced, expertly characterized tale of a decades-long lie and the painter who tries to make sense of it all later. The mother of the novel’s unnamed narrator, reveals that the man she divorced years ago is not actually, as she had always claimed, the narrator’s father. On her deathbed, Grace, the mother, encourages the narrator, a painter, to piece the truth together in Hawaii. There Grace Rolston, vacationing with her philandering Hollywood husband, first met and fell in love with Lee Corbet at a tony Oahu beach club in 1979.

Other pieces of the mystery involve Mitchell Slack, who in ‘79 was breaking up with his girlfriend and coming to terms with his homosexuality, and his malevolent older brother Ray, a mysterious hood who played some role in Grace and Lee’s short time together—and in whatever event changed everyone’s lives forever. Over multiple trips to Hawaii, the painter uncovers as much of the truth as possible. Setting the narrative largely in 1979, revealing what the narrator has uncovered, Zettler skillfully presents characters that are neither good nor bad but persuasive shades of gray, with the compelling exception of Ray, whose eventual encounter with karma proves satisfying. Unhappily married Grace, who can’t quite kick smoking, has packed a .38 revolver in her suitcase, while Vietnam vet-turned-restaurateur Lee, still coming to terms with his war experiences, learns that he knows Grace’s husband only after he and Grace have relished stolen hours together.

In sharp, memorable prose, Zettler deftly ties a bundle of story lines into one gripping narrative, teasing the final revelations in a way that will have readers itching to arrive at the truth at last. This glimpse of late-70s Hawaii rings true, and readers interested in the mysteries of convincingly real people will be captivated until the final page is turned.

Takeaway: A skillful, emotional dive into late ‘70s Hawaii and a mother’s secret past.

Great for fans of: Liane Moriarty’s The Husband's Secret, Jasmin Darznik’s The Good Daughter.

Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A-

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