A Cornish woman with dreams of becoming a sculptor grows into herself over the course of 14 years.
Olivia Arterton moved to St. Agnes, Cornwall, with her parents when she was 13. Her beloved grandmother, one of the reasons for their move, died just two years later, but she always supported Liv’s dream of being an artist. After graduating from the Edinburgh College of Art and then studying sculpture on a four-week course in Florence, Liv comes home for the summer, fully intending to move to London in the autumn. But her joyful holiday—complete with a romance with burgeoning singer-songwriter Finn, whom she’s known since they were in school together—comes to an abrupt halt when she has to suddenly take on the mantle of adulthood and support her older brother, Michael, who has Down syndrome. The story unfolds from Liv’s point of view, beginning when she’s 28 and starting a new relationship with Tom Thornton, a one-time search-and-rescue pilot from Wales, and covering the preceding six summers she spent with Finn, who comes home for a few months every year; then it stretches through the ensuing seven summers. We follow along as Liv earns money by working at a beach restaurant, renting out half her home, and cleaning summer rental properties while finding time for sculpting; she’s there for her brother as he lives his life with his own home, friends, and job; and she moves forward with her dreams of making it into the Royal Society of Sculptors.
A beautiful story of love and loss, experiencing and overcoming grief, and finding oneself—and joy—in the process.