"Love Like This is an astonishment. The novel comes on like a quiet exploration of the empty nest syndrome, but quickly deepens into an exploration of female identity, desire, and the utter unpredictability of love. Cynthia Newberry Martin's prose is confident, precise, and, when required, as bold as a billboard. The story she's crafted shocked and delighted me." Steve Almond, author of All the Secrets of the World
"Cynthia Newberry Martin has written a well-crafted and sensitive story about the perils of assuming how things are going to be rather than talking them through. Angelina and Will are relatable people whose lives are changing in their middle age, but my heart was stolen by Lucy and her son John Milton, characters whose lives are unusual and compelling. I will reread the billboard scene many times." Alice Elliott Dark, author of Fellowship Point and In the Gloaming
"So isolated by wealth, beauty, and family, her husband's house rules and her mother's agoraphobia, Angelina arrives at middle age believing only the rich know about poetry. Intimate, brutal and compelling, this beautifully-paced novel is her Buddha's journey down from the hilltop and into the world of women, the poor and the unbeautiful, who will teach her compassion, courage, open-mindedness and maybe a little self-love." Pam Houston, author of Deep Creek, Finding Hope In The High Country
"Intimate and compelling, Cynthia Newberry Martin's Love Like This renders the subterranean longings of women and men in midlife and midstream-at the end of one way of being and at the beginning of the next. This complex and insightful story-about marriage, parenting, friendship, and rediscovering parts of yourself you thought were lost-lingers in the imagination long after you've read the last page." Samantha Dunn, author of Not By Accident and Failing Paris
"Brilliantly conveys the complexities of love and marriage. Her protagonist, Angelina, is torn between her love for her husband Will and her desire, now that they are empty nesters, to be alone and free to discover who she truly is and what she wants from her life. Martin masterfully depicts both the positive and negative aspects of Angelina's conflicting desires, and as a result even the smallest, most ordinary events in Angelina's life are packed with powerful drama. At one point a character tells her 'The world is full of wonder.' So is this book." David Jauss, author of Glossolalia: New & Selected Stories