The Passionate Sister
Category: | Fiction - Inspirational |
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Author: | John Thorndike |
Publisher: | Beck & Branch Publishers |
Publication Date: | September 15, 2025 |
Number of Pages: | 238 |
ISBN-13: | 979-8992668216 |
ASIN: | B0FHWL52VT |
The Passionate Sister by John Thorndike is inspired
by the story of the author’s mother. It follows Virginia “Ginny” Thorndike, a
middle-aged, recently-divorced former anesthesiologist, as she struggles to
maintain sobriety after a lifetime of addiction to alcohol and prescription
drugs. The novel opens with Ginny leaving rehab and being driven home by her
son Rob, who helps her purge the house of every trace of liquor and pills.
Ginny’s path to rebuilding her life passes through her complicated
relationships: with Rob and his brother Jamie, both adults with unconventional
lives—Rob on a commune, Jamie in Key West with his partner Miles. As Ginny
attempts to claim a sober existence in her Sag Harbor home, she leans on her
sons, attends AA meetings, and faces loneliness, regret, and her own sense of
failure. The narrative expands to include Jamie’s partner Miles’s devastating
diagnosis of ALS (Lou Gehrig’s disease), forcing Ginny to become a caretaker
once again. Can Ginny find purpose and fulfillment at last?
This is a heartwarming novel, and it continues to tug at the
edges of the heart even after turning the last page. John Thorndike creates a
relatable heroine in Ginny — intelligent, flawed, fiercely self-critical, and
hungry for connection. Her voice—by turns wry, vulnerable, and
unsparing—anchors the reader in the inner workings of addiction and recovery.
Her sons, Rob and Jamie, are distinct: Rob, the practical and loving son, who
has embraced communal living and alternative family structures; Jamie, the
sensitive artist, partnered with Miles, whose illness brings a new dimension of
grief and care to the family. The secondary characters—Ginny’s sister Carol,
commune members, and old friends—enrich the narrative with their own struggles
and perspectives on aging, loss, and love. The settings—Sag Harbor’s windswept
emptiness in winter, the messy commune in Ohio, and the humid languor of Key
West— are fully drawn. Thorndike explores themes of addiction, shame,
forgiveness, aging, sexuality, and the search for meaning after loss, and does
so with unusual skill. The prose is lyrical, and it succeeds in creating an
experience that moves fluidly through time and memory, punctuated by Ginny’s
diary entries and raw confessions. The novel’s structure—a collage of present
action, flashbacks, and multiple points of view—reflects the disjointed path of
healing. The Passionate Sister is a triumphant offering for those who
struggle with any form of addiction and their loved ones, a story that
underlines the truth that no matter how messy life can be, we can always create
meaning.