The Wedding of the Year (St. Piran's Hospital #1) by Caroline Anderson


The Wedding of the Year (St. Piran's Hospital #1)
Title : The Wedding of the Year (St. Piran's Hospital #1)
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0373068476
ISBN-10 : 9780373068470
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 256
Publication : First published December 1, 2010

Your invitation to the wedding everyone in Penhally has been waiting for…

Dr. Nick Tremayne and midwife Kate Althorp have a love that's lasted a lifetime, but a love that's been unfulfilled. Apart from on one fateful night—a night so emotional, so passionate, that nothing else mattered…a night that resulted in the birth of their son, Jem!

Now this precious little boy is fighting for his life in St. Piran's Hospital. Seeing how much their son needs them could be what it takes for Nick and Kate to find their way back to each other….

If so, bells could be ringing out over Penhally Bay as the town gathers to watch Nick and Kate finally say "I do"!


The Wedding of the Year (St. Piran's Hospital #1) Reviews


  • Lu Bielefeld

    I didn't feel any sympathy for the hero.
    My only comment is that if he had kept the zipper of his pants closed none of this would have happened.
    He had no respect for the love of our heroine and a night of drinking he made another woman pregnant and had to marry this other woman leaving the heroine with a broken heart. A one-night stand turned into a marriage full of children and regrets.
    And worst of all is that our heroine living in the same town had to witness everything live and in color.
    And while married he had a night of love with the heroine and made her pregnant but buried his head in the sand and ignored the son for twelve years.
    No sympathy for him.
    ------------
    ==>Highlights<==

    She couldn’t leave. She couldn’t. She’d lived in Penhally for ever, her entire life. He’d known her since she was twelve, dated her when she was fifteen and he was seventeen, left her at eighteen to go to university, intending to come back for her—but then he’d met Annabel, and everything had changed.

    Kate he’d loved, all those years ago. Had loved, and lost, because of his own stupid fault.

    He’d known it would come out at some time, he’d known it would be hard, but like this, with Jeremiah’s life hanging in the balance

    And, boy, would they be judging, and talking, and there would be plenty to say. Nick had been well and truly married twelve years ago, at the time of Jem’s conception, and the good people of Penhally held no truck with infidelity. When they found out…

    Rob Werrick was a good man, a decent man, who’d stood by her last year during her treatment for breast cancer, who’d supported her through the most dreadful days of fear and uncertainty, a role Nick had sorely wanted to play, but all he had been able to do was sit, isolated from her, and pray for her.

    ‘Only if you can’t avoid it. Seeing him reminds you of your human frailty, and you don’t like that.’ He didn’t. He hated the constant reminder of what they’d done that night, of how he’d betrayed Annabel, tarnished the memory of James.

    ‘I can’t lean on you, Nick. I won’t let myself. Every time I do, every time I think I dare, you let me down.’

    Nick, the only man she’d ever really loved, keeping her at arm’s length when all she’d really wanted was for him to hold her and tell her it would be all right. Tell her that if it wouldn’t, he’d be there for their son.

    ‘Because I didn’t accept that he was my son. Because I was letting you down again, hiding from the truth, hoping it would go away, but it won’t, will it?

    ‘We don’t always get what we’re expecting in life,’ she said gently. ‘I always thought you’d come back from university and marry me and I’d have your children. Instead you married Annabel, and I married James, and we couldn’t have any, and you ended up with loads.’

    Had Annabel known she wasn’t his first choice? Had she known he’d only done the decent thing and made the best marriage he could with the hand fate had dealt him?

    You were always my soul mate.

  • reeder (reviews)

    The protagonists in The Wedding of the Year were secondary characters with tragic romantic tension running throughout the
    Brides of Penhally Bay series. I've only read Sarah Morgan's book from that series, so I am left wondering if the other books could possibly provide additional background information that would make this book -- this hero -- less revolting.

    Here's the romance part of the story (I'm completely ignoring the medical part of the story, which details the heroine's son's treatment and recovery after sustaining serious injuries in a automobile accident...I really don't get the appeal of the dreary medical details in HQN/M&B's medical line):

    "...I did everything I could to be fair to Annabel, to be good to her, because it wasn't her fault I'd got her in that mess, and she was lovely. It was no hardship being married to her, and if I didn't think about Kate, it was OK."

    [Bonus fact: the above quote is the hero talking to his adult children about his marriage to their dead mother.]

    Sometime after his return, the heroine marries a guy named James who dies in a tragic storm 12 years before the story begins. This storm is a community-defining event that also takes the lives of the hero's father and brother. The hero's wife sends her grieving husband to check on the heroine, who is cinematically standing on rain-lashed cliffs also grieving her husband. They have sex (they'd moved indoors by then), and she becomes pregnant. When the hero asks if the baby is his, she denies it and raises the child as her dead husband's baby. Meanwhile, she's also working as the office manager for the hero's medical practice.
    "I asked you if it was my child, and you said no. And I accepted it without question, with relief, even, because I didn't ever want to have to think of that night again."


    Five years before the story begins, the hero's wife dies from a ruptured appendix. We know the hero is angry and grieving because in the first book of the Penhally Bay series, he's objecting to his daughter's relationship with the doctor who failed to save her life.

    Two years before the story begins, the hero apparently realizes the heroine's son is his and he...continues to ignore the child's existence. So heroic.

    One year before the story begins, the heroine is dating a guy named Rob while going through a breast cancer scare. The hero comes to her house to talk with her (whether about the kid, the breast cancer, or their 30-year non-relationship, I don't know) and spies the heroine and Rob kissing in the kitchen before they turn the light off and go to her bedroom. He immediately drives off to sleep with Louise, the woman he's been seeing since his wife's death. He doesn't support the heroine through her cancer treatment, and tells himself he's ignoring her to give her relationship with Rob a chance.
    "Nick, I needed you -- even if you weren't with me, I needed to know that you cared, but you never said a thing."


    As is typical with the Mills & Boon medical romances, the present-day storyline is kind of overwhelmed by the details of the injured son's treatment. Plus the hero has to explain his fourth child to his three adult children (who all had stories of their own in the Penhally Bay series). Plus that unacknowledged child has some anger issues when he discovers that the dead man he thought was his father isn't his father. And the protagonists just kind of finally, flatly, pathetically get together.

    If I had read the Penhally Bay series, if I had built up any sense of anticipation for this couple's long-awaited HEA, I think I would be twice as disappointed by how selfish and weak the hero is at every key point in their story. His defining emotion is guilt, and this book shows me how very selfish that emotion can be.

    I'm giving The Wedding of the Year one star plus an unearned bonus star because I didn't read the lead-in series. (Hilariously, the protagonists in Sarah Morgan's
    The Italian's New Year Marriage Wish leave Penhally Bay for Italy at the end of their book. It's like she was sending a message to readers to get out while they can.)

  • shms

    I really really don't know how to rate this. Ultimately I was left with such a feeling of sadness, not joy at the hea. It felt like a partially finished book but what there was of it was good. The resolution was lacking in answering those unanswered questions and there were many but mainly around Jem and how he missed out on so many years without a dad. The attempt to share the blame between his parents see saws and left me somewhat uncertain. I didn't particularly take a liking to either MC's with the h appearing doormatish and the H a coward.

  • Cc

    I just thought he was a weak, weak, weak man. And don't get me started on his parenting skills. I like Caroline Andersons writing most of the time, but this story didn't do anything for me except make me mad. I didn't think it was romantic at ALL.

  • Veronica WordsAreMyDrinkOfChoice

    So far not impressed. The hero is a self absorbed, weak man, the heroine a martyr doormat, and not a lover of stories with other plots going on like Josh and Megan.

    Awful, qhyndo writers hate their heroines?

  • Tia

    I did wonder what happened with these two characters and was glad to finally find out. It was a bit dull at times but enjoyable never the less.

  • Tiffany

    Did not care for this book.

  • Lindsi

    1.75*

  • Dhaverma

    I made it about 1/3 of way through book - it's hunting for lost little boy, bickering, sniveling, why do I want to read this book?

  • Debra

    This is the first book in this series about St Piran's. Nick and Kate have a long past. They were childhood loves. He left for uni and came back married. This broke Kate. Then years later they have a one night stand on the night her husband dies. This left her with her son. Now years later after his wife died they are brought together when it is revealed that her son is his. Now the story goes on...what will his grown children think of their father? Will they ever get their HEA ending? This story has been touched through out other books within St Piran's life time. Caroline Anderson wove this story just right.

  • Kace | The Booknerd

    It was bittersweet. My heart broke for them. The angst about killed me. No matter what's going in their lives, Nick and Kate can't deny the feelings they still have for one another. And by the end of the book, I was so invested in their story. I felt so connected that it felt like I was right there in the story, experiencing all feelings, hopes, and heartbreaks alongside them.

  • Elli

    I liked it more than I thould I would, not having read the rest of the Penhally Bay books.

  • Alisha

    was so glad to finally get to read their story. Have been following them through the other books

  • Brianne

    Loved this story, especially after watching these two characters through so many ups and downs during the books of the previous continutity

  • Harlequin Books

    Miniseries: St. Piran's Hospital
    Category: Classic Romance