About this item

A private Mexican villa is the backdrop to this smart, absorbing story of a milestone vacation in a tropical paradise gone wrong, wrong, wrongTwo families arrive in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, for a once-in-a-lifetime vacation. Jenna has organized the trip to celebrate her husband's fiftieth birthday--she's been looking forward to it for months. She's sure everything is going to be just perfect--and the margarita refills delivered by the house staff certainly don't hurt, either. What could go wrong?Yet as the families settle into their vacation routines, their best friends suddenly seem like annoying strangers, and even Jenna's reliable husband, Peter, is sharing clandestine phone calls with someone--but who? Jenna's teenage daughter, Clem, is spending an awful lot of time with Malcolm, whose questionable rep got him expelled from school. Jenna's dream of the ultimate celebration begins to crack and eventually crumbles completely, leaving her wondering whom she can trust, and whether her privileged life is about to be changed forever.Readers of Emma Straub, Meg Wolitzer and Delia Ephron will love this sharply funny novel. Whether you're putting it in your carry-on to read on the beach or looking to escape the dead-of-winter blues, Tomorrow There Will Be Sun is the perfect companion.



About the Author

Dana Reinhardt

Why don't you have a bio section? Because I hate writing about myself.But wouldn't that be easier than answering a whole bunch of FAQs? Maybe. Probably. Go on... So where are you from? I'm from Los Angeles, but now I live in San Francisco. Except for the summers where I go back to Los Angeles in search of the sun. What are you doing when you aren't writing? Laundry, usually. Sometimes dishes. And I really like to walk near the Golden Gate Bridge. Why don't you run instead of walk? Running is hard. And I'm sort of lazy. Have you ever had a real job? Yes. Of course I have. I've waited tables, worked with adolescents in foster care, read the slush pile at a publishing house, and fact checked for a movie magazine. I also worked for FRONTLINE on PBS and Peter Jennings at ABC. I went to law school, which I know doesn't count as a job, but hey, that was a lot of work. What's your writing day like? Do you stick to a routine? I like to write in the mornings. Sometimes that means I have to get up really early. I try to write 700 words a day -- about three pages. I know there are lots of writers out there who can write way more than that. I know this because writers like to tell you about how many words they've written on FACEBOOK. So I try not to look at FACEBOOK when I'm writing. And anyway, I've learned that 700 words are about all I'm good for on any given day, and if I write more than that I usually end up getting rid of most of it later. What, are you lazy or something? I already told you I'm lazy. But seriously, 700 words are a lot of words. 700 of them, to be precise. Are your books autobiographical? Not really. I've been on vacation in Mexico, but everything went just fine and I had a lovely time. I'm not adopted, I've never told a lie that sent someone to jail, I've never built a house or had a brother go to war. But there are always things in my books that come from my life or from the lives of the people around me. It would be impossible to make up everything. You used to write young adult fiction and now you've written an adult book. What gives? I started out writing young adult fiction because I was a young adult when I fell in love with reading and I can remember how books made me feel back then. How they provided both comfort and escape. That might make me sound like a shut-in, but I wasn't. I was just open to the experience books offered, probably more open than I am now as an adult. And I like writing for that sort of audience.But young adult books have to, by definition, be about young adults. And after writing eight of them, I started to feel like there were adult issues and characters I was interested in exploring. How come there aren't any vampires or wizards in your books? Hmmmm... good question. Maybe I should write about vampires and wizards. No, you shouldn't. You wouldn't be very good at that.Thanks for the vote of confidence. Did you wear



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