Another Near-Miss From Yarn-Spinner Lerstner
Review by Alex Ricciardi
Charlie Lerstner has a fascinating problem: He’s able to write two-thirds of a great book. His first novel, Zero Miles As The Crow Flies, was the story of a man’s spiritual awakening. A page-turner, it was a surprisingly solid effort from a previously unpublished author—that is, until you reached page 180. The Banker Won’t Return, his second work, similarly faltered near its climax, and left many readers (this reviewer included) scratching their heads as to why Lerstner would end his story that way. The same problem plagues One Love Letter To Another, a book whose first half is as good as anything written in the past fifteen years.
Love Letter is the story of Audrey Downin, a wealthy heiress who hasn’t worked a day in her life. She does not, however, flaunt her wealth. She is not a jet-setter, a sharp dresser, a wild partygoer or drug user. Audrey prefers to sit at home and read. In fact, she almost never leaves the house, and has never left the country. When her extensive home library is exhausted, however, she is forced to go exploring outside her home, searching for something interesting.