Hadley just missed his plane. While his chances of being on time for the wedding of his father in London are shrinking inexorably, she wanders through the crowd of New York, waiting for the next flight. In her wanderings, she crosses paths with a young man at the focus undoubtedly English, which threatens to be his flight companion for the coming hours. And as in an airplane, time and reality always seem strangely suspended, they will confide some fragments of their lives from the heart. But once the plane lands in the London fog, what will be left of its shared confidences? Hadley and does happen to come to terms with her father and his new life?
I admit that I loved my reading of the Astronomical distance between you and me, and suddenly I was a little less excited by it, which repeats almost the same ingredients ... family stories, unlikely encounter between two very nice young people, scenic in places ... the cocktail is drinkable and even pleasant, but not enough to distinguish the original precedent.
I think you'll like many girls (it's recommended that schoolgirls, apparently), and while I enjoyed the history of the characters and their psychological journey, I stay on my hunger ...