A century-old textile mill.
A redevelopment project headed for rejection.
Two professionals who can't agree on what should be saved.
Claire Whitmore has built her career on moving projects forward. Daniel Rourke has built his on making sure history isn't erased in the process.
When a little-known planning clause forces them into an uneasy partnership, both expect compromise. Neither expects the project to change them.
As they work to transform the abandoned Carver Block into something the city can embrace, forgotten records begin to surface. Family stories. Factory logs. Photographs preserved for generations. Evidence that a building can carry more than brick and stone-it can carry memory.
But saving the past is easier than deciding what comes next.
Set against the backdrop of urban renewal, community history, and the quiet decisions that shape a life, Something Worth Marking is a thoughtful contemporary novel about place, legacy, and the people who choose to stay when leaving would be easier.
For readers who enjoy character-driven fiction, meaningful relationships, and stories where hope is built one careful choice at a time.