Love will mess you up unlike anything else. Mae Seasons knows that, yet she didn't expect it to come back for her at ninety-three.
After leaving Silver Springs and Alex behind two years earlier, a discovery in France suggests that the man she once so fiercely loved - and lost to war - may have left behind more than just memories. Upon this breakthrough Mae's carefully held story begins to crack, and when she calls Alex in the middle of the night with the news, she pulls him back into her orbit.
What follows is a journey across continents and into the past - through letters, secrets, and the truths that change not only what you know, but who you are.
A sequel to Between Two Seasons, Some Sunny Day unfolds in alternating perspectives from Alex - the narrator readers first came to know - and Mae, whose voice and story is as sharp as it is unforgettable.
Deeply moving and laced with humour, Some Sunny Day is about the ghosts we chase, the reality we choose to believe, and finding connection in the most unexpected places.
With its literary sensibility and accessible emotional core, Some Sunny Day is an ideal fit for book clubs, discussion groups, and readers who loved works like The Notebook, The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo, or The Light We Lost. Its themes of late-in-life reckoning, wartime legacy, and enduring love create natural entry points for a wide readership, while its narrative structure rewards close reading and conversation.