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Rachel Reviews: Nice People on Planes by Lana Hart

In Hart's excellent book, we follow Cora and make, through encounters she has on the plane trips, discoveries about her and her life

By Rachel DeemingPublished 3 months ago 2 min read
Rachel Reviews: Nice People on Planes by Lana Hart
Photo by Arnaud Weyts on Unsplash

I've read through my subtitle above and realised that it doesn't really sell this book as a taster of what it can offer but it's actually really, really good.

It is structured, as I have stated, around plane trips that Cora, our narrator, takes on planes, mainly for work trips although she does also travel to New Zealand as well. These trips are all dated and listed at the start of each chapter and the people that she meets all engage in conversations from which she launches into thought about her life mainly and about the people around her, especially her daughter Dottie, her son Dylan and her brother, Christopher. She is also stimulated by these conversations into looking back at her marriages and this causes her to reflect on what went wrong and prompts speculation into what she might want for the future.

Cora is an engaging narrator and she lives a fast-paced life. She is successful in what she does, which seems to be a facilitator sent to companies to encourage better relationships in the workplace with a view to improving productivity and results, no doubt. She gets a lot of satisfaction from this although she is starting to feel the strain as a result of the amount of travelling she has to do as well as the time it takes her away from her family and how this impacts on relationships that are important to her.

Running alongside these plane journeys and Cora's internal examinings of self is the story of her family's bolthole in New Zealand which is coming under threat from developers who want to demolish it to build a resort. The ramifications of her accepting an offer in order for this to happen lead to confliction: it was built by her grandfather and is ramshackle by her own admission but she is invested in it, more so than her siblings as it holds more than just memories for her. However, selling it would lead to financial freedom and opportunity for her and her family and locals - what should she do?

There was much to like here. I especially enjoyed the "Interstices" that Hart chose to include: a little surreal and whimsical but as a lot of the action takes place in the clouds, it seems only fair to have them. Only on reading the book will you know what I mean!

Rachel Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

This review was first published on Reedsy Discovery where I was privileged to read it as an ARC:

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About the Creator

Rachel Deeming

Storyteller. Poet. Reviewer. Traveller.

I love to write. Check me out in the many places where I pop up:

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Comments (3)

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  • John Cox3 months ago

    With the right unexpected companion I have had conversations that have lasted entire trips, so I can relate to at least some degree. I like the idea behind this story, very intriguing. Another excellent review like always, Rachel!

  • I don't care what it is, or how much sentimental value it holds for me, but if selling it would give me financial freedom, I'll do it without a second thought. It's either Cora isn't desperate enough or she's just dumb, lol. Loved your review!

  • Andrea Corwin 3 months ago

    Is it a novel or true? Loved your review- makes me want to read it. I actually don’t like to talk much when I’m on plane flights. I think I can recall perhaps four conversations in my many many many many flights for work and pleasure that I’ve enjoyed; and the rest of the time I have my nose in a book so people don’t talk to me. I guess some people could judge me from that 🤷‍♀️. Extroverted Introvert LOL and I hate how nowadays all the younger people talk so loud that you can hear them all the way across a restaurant all the way from four rows behind you on a plane, even with all the noise on the plane.

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