Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Miss You: A Novel
Miss You: A Novel
Miss You: A Novel
Audiobook13 hours

Miss You: A Novel

Written by Kate Eberlen

Narrated by Anna Acton and Finlay Robertson

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

About this audiobook

""If ever a couple was ‘meant to be,’ it’s Tess and Gus. This is such a witty, poignant, and uplifting story of two lives crisscrossing over the years, with near miss after near miss. . . . I couldn’t put it down."" — Sophie Kinsella

For fans of One Day in December, The Flatshare, and This Time Next Year, a wryly romantic debut novel that asks, what if you just walked by the love of your life, but didn’t even know it?

""TODAY IS THE FIRST DAY OF THE REST OF YOUR LIFE."" Tess can’t get the motto from her mother’s kitchen knickknack out of her head, even though she’s in Florence on an idyllic vacation before starting university in London.

Gus is also visiting Florence, on a holiday with his parents seven months after tragedy shattered their lives. Headed to medical school in London, he’s trying to be a dutiful son but longs to escape and discover who he really is.

A chance meeting brings these eighteen-year-olds together for a brief moment—the first of many times their paths will crisscross as time passes and their lives diverge from those they’d envisioned. Over the course of the next sixteen years, Tess and Gus will face very different challenges and choices. Separated by distance and circumstance, the possibility of these two connecting once more seems slight.

But while fate can separate two people, it can also bring them back together again. . . .

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperAudio
Release dateApr 4, 2017
ISBN9780062660626
Miss You: A Novel
Author

Kate Eberlen

KATE EBERLEN grew up in a small town close to London and spent her childhood reading books and longing to escape to the big city. She studied classics at Oxford University before pursuing a variety of jobs in publishing, the arts and teaching. Eberlen loves Italy and dance, two passions that are reflected in If Only. She lives in London.

Related to Miss You

Related audiobooks

Contemporary Women's For You

View More

Related articles

Related categories

Reviews for Miss You

Rating: 3.9320987074074076 out of 5 stars
4/5

81 ratings11 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Loved it! Interesting charavters, believable romantic plot and happy ending! Great!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    At eighteen, Tess Costello and Gus MacDonald both face obstacles that threaten their future happiness. After her mother passes away at a relatively young age, Tess is left with an ineffectual father and a special needs sister, four-year-old Hope. The child frequently and loudly acts out in public. Gus, who is guilt-ridden after his older brother dies in an accident, reluctantly applies to medical school to appease his grief-stricken parents. Tess and Gus meet briefly now and then, but their lives take different trajectories. They each enter into relationships with high expectations, but the joy they seek seems to be just out of reach.

    "Miss You," by Kate Eberlen, spans sixteen years, from 1997 to 2013, with Tess and Gus telling their stories in alternating chapters. We learn about their childhoods, parents, siblings, and friends. In addition, we observe them dealing with adversity, dreaming of careers in the arts and literature, and trying to find the one person who will accept and understand them. Eberlen depicts Tess and Gus as flawed but sincere individuals who pay dearly for their missteps on the road to maturity. We also encounter other memorable characters, including Tess's best friend, Doll, an attractive young woman with a knack for getting what she wants. Meanwhile, Gus is attracted to Lucy, a pretty and good-hearted classmate whom he meets in medical school.

    Eberlen explores the unexpected detours that Gus, Tess, and others take during the course of the novel. She also thoughtfully deals with a number of grim issues: autism, cancer, divorce, bereavement, and adultery. Fortunately, there are welcome passages of humor that offset the scenes of heartbreak, and the author delights us with mini-travelogues of Tuscany and mouth-watering descriptions of deliciously prepared food. "Miss You" is poignant, heartfelt, and engrossing, but it is weakened by a clich̩-ridden and predictable conclusion. Still, "Miss You" is an ambitious and compelling work of fiction about dashed prospects, the futility of regret, the value of forgiveness, and life's bittersweet irony.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I feel misled by the One Day comparison.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I can relate to the sincere response some readers have to this book - the structure and segments felt a little too tidily contrived to me and a few big loose ends and a couple tiny ones felt too offhandedly tied up or ignored inspire of the investment in the setups - all that aside it IS a book that draws you in regardless of how likeable you find the protagonists .
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A great story! I really enjoyed this book. Looking forward to reading more of this authors work in future. I received a copy of Miss You from Early Reviewers in exchange for an honest review!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This was such a great read....I loved the story, characters and how the story was woven together. I could not put the book down! The author did a wonderful job telling the story of Tess and Gus, beginning when they are both just eighteen years old. The book continues through their young lives and through the many chance encounters or near encounters they have through the next several years. While they both suffer loss, heartbreak and career challenges, we get to see how they each find their ways on the path to happiness. As an Early Reviewer, I received a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I really enjoyed this book. The characters were engaging and interesting--keeping the story moving. Gus and Tess are realistic characters with paths that are parallel but yet they never intersect. The book follows their journey over 13 years with all of the joy, struggle and grief for each. The story is relatable on so many layers that it is hard to put down. All along as a reader you are rooting for the two characters to get together. While it is somewhat of a romance, it is so much more. Without giving away the story, I can definitely recommend this summer read. Reader received a complimentary copy from Library Thing Early Reviewers
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Absolutely loved it! I think some books just find a way into your life at the right time and this might be a case of that. Maybe six months from now I wouldn't feel quite the same way but this was just the perfect read for me at the moment. The premise isn't really groundbreaking as it's just a story about two people who meet in Italy and share a brief moment in time but go back to England alone. The book follows their lives for the next 16 years as they experience heartache, love, etc.. On an emotional level I just really connected with the characters, particularly Tess. I had a feeling early on this would be a tear jerker and sure enough it was. This might be a depressing read for some but I couldn't put it down as there is something about following characters over the course of years that just gets me every time. Really loved this one!I won a free copy of this book from LibraryThing but was under no obligation to post a review. All views expressed are my honest opinion.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Miss You is Kate Eberlen's absolutely wonderful debut novel.I loved the cover as it reminded me of a patchwork quilt. And then I looked a little closer at the pictures in the letters. It is two people who always seem to be headed in a different direction, never quite meeting. And that is the premise of Miss You.Miss You opens in 1997 when both Tree (short for Teresa) and Gus are on holiday in Italy. They both happen to visit a church at the same time, exchange a few words and then go on with their lives.Eberlen has created rich, full lives for both Tree and Gus. But not perfect - their lives are also filled with loss, grief, anger along with the happy moments. Miss You is told in alternating chapters, in the same time frame, from the two as the years progress. And unusually for me, I didn't have a favourite - I liked them both the same. I became so caught up in each of their lives and kept reading 'just one more chapter' to see what might happen next.What happened next, but also where. For you see, in every new time period, there's a moment when their paths cross. Not directly at first, but in passing, without recognizing that they've already met."We think we choose our friends, but perhaps it's only just a matter of chance.""Do you believe in the one? As in, there's one person out there who's destined for you?"With every new entry and years passing, I found myself hoping for that 'star-crossed lovers' moment that their paths would cross. Do they? Will things come full circle? I'm not saying - you'll have to read Miss You to find out. I adored this book - it's warm, witty, heartwarming and real - with a touch of just maybe.......I'm looking forward to what Kate Eberlen writes next!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Fate or chance? Does destiny exist or is everything random? Statistics can explain everything, right? Could you be happy with a number of different people or is there only "The One" for you? If there is just one person for everyone, is there a perfect time to meet that person and what happens if you meet them before you or they are ready? Questions like these come up very frequently when people talk about love and the answers can be debated indefinitely. In Kate Eberlen's new novel, Miss You, the main characters cross and recross each others' paths for years, never quite making the connection that brings them together. Does Fate keep bringing them together until she gets it right or are these chance encounters just that, chance? Tess and Gus are meant to be, or are they?Tess and her best friend Doll are in Florence towards the end of their last vacation before Tess goes off to university. Gus is in Florence with his parents as they all face the sudden, shocking loss of his older brother. Tess and Gus run into each other in a beautiful, quiet church and then again on the street in Florence but they each go their own way, returning to the lives that each had planned. This may be the first time they come across each other, but it certainly won't be the last.When Tess gets home, she is blindsided by the fact that her mother is very ill. Her five year old sister's care all falls to her and when their mother dies, Tess's dreams of university die with her. Someone has to be there to take care of Hope and that someone is Tess. Nothing about her life is the way she planned it. Meanwhile Gus is not in charge of his own life either, compelled to live up to a memory (one that perhaps isn't as honest as it should be) and choosing to train as a doctor because that's what his father wants for him and that's what his brother was doing. Like Tess's, his life is far from what he once dreamed and wanted. Both characters go along living their lives sometimes seeming to move towards each other and other times away. As they go about their daily lives, experiencing events major and minor, there are constant near misses between the two of them, times where they might have connected or met but didn't, times when they crossed each others' paths but didn't pause, times when their lives almost intersected but then didn't.The novel is told in chapters alternating from Tess's first person perspective to Gus's first person perspective so neither of them know how close they occasionally come to meeting the other but the reader sees them slip past each other time after time after time. Spanning 16 years, the chapters sometimes jump in time, showing Tess and Gus at major decision points in their lives and giving the reader the general shape of their lives. But their lives are not parallel, nor are they combined except in the very beginning in Florence and when they finally meet in the end. For the majority of the novel, they live very separate lives, without any knowledge of each other and their situations. Both of them are damaged by their losses and face difficulties that reverberate throughout their lives and relationships. Gus always feels he's competing with his dead brother and coming up short. Tess not only becomes the primary caregiver to her sister, where things get even more complicated when their father essentially checks out after Hope is diagnosed with Asperger's, but she also lives with the fear of dying young of breast cancer just like her mother. Neither of the characters is entirely likable and Gus especially does some pretty reprehensible things but they are very real, the both of them.The separateness of their two lives and therefore the two plot lines might cause some readers a bit of frustration but Eberlen seems to know just when to insert a near miss to remind the reader that while these two are currently living lives unknown to each other, they are in fact close enough to touch. Because of the first person narration, it can be hard to know the secondary characters and sometimes the reader needs to be reminded that these minor characters are being filtered through the main characters' eyes. After so many years of Tess and Gus passing like ships in the night, and in some ways that journey is everything, the ending feels rushed even if the reader knew that's where it was going all along. Leaving aside the predictable quickness of the ending, this is definitely a different and interesting take on the "what ifs" of life. A worthy addition to your beach bag for sure.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    A special thank you to Edelweiss and HarperCollins for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

    This book was a combination of One Day, and something by Liane Moriarty — really a fun read!

    My criticism would be maybe with the genre? Is it me, or are the leading ladies in these types of books often a bit pathetic? From affairs, to accidental pregnancies, to self-sacrificial situations that boarder on martyrdom. Ugh... Too much of this stalls the story, and makes the female lead (and in this case, male lead as well) rather weak and at times unlikable. Speaking of unlikable, I really had a hard time with Gus. Why did he have to cheat on his lovely girlfriend with his dead brother's fiancée, Charlotte, who is incredibly frigid and appears to be out of his league?

    What I did like was the premise of the book. Chance meetings, fated lovers, and the unwavering belief in romance. There were parts that were simply delightful and endearing, and I would definitely read more by this author and recommend this book for a fun summer read.