Author | Nicholas Sparks |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre | Romance |
Publisher | Grand Central Publishing |
Publication date
|
September 17, 2013 |
Media type | Hardcover, audiobook, e-book |
Pages | 568 |
ISBN | |
OCLC | 829744527 |
The Longest Ride is Nicholas Sparks' 17th romance novel, released on September 17, 2013.
After being trapped in an isolated car crash, the life of elderly widower Ira Levinson becomes entwined with that of young college student, Sophia Danko and the bull-riding cowboy Luke Collins, whom she has fallen for. The novel is told through the perspectives of these three characters as they go through their own daily lives, both separately and together.
Ira Levinson, ninety-one years old and already in poor health, is just holding on; remaining alert only because his wife Ruth, who has died, appears as an image to help him remember their life together: how they met, the paintings they collected and the dark days of WW2.
Just a few miles away, Sophia, a Wake Forest college student's life is about to change forever as she meets an unexpected love, Luke. Luke is a cowboy and risk-taking bull-rider, unlike anyone she has ever known. Together they experience the joys of love as well as the difficulties that come with Luke's dangerous career.
Two couples who have little in common, yet whose lives will converge with unexpected poignancy.
The inspiration for the book was Black Mountain College (1933–1957), a liberal arts school whose faculty included some of the most prominent names in the modern art movement. Styles mentioned in the book include Abstract Expressionism, Futurism, Bauhaus, Cubism, and Lyrical Abstractionism.
The backstory of characters Ira and Ruth Levinson is that they visited Black Mountain College during their honeymoon and met with students and artists at the school artists' exhibition. Ira bought six paintings for Ruth which would be the beginning of more than a thousand paintings they would collect focusing on 20th-century American modern art. Artists in the book include Ken Noland, Ray Johnson, Robert Rauschenberg, Elaine de Kooning, Willem de Kooning, Susan Weil, Pat Passlof, Jackson Pollock, Jasper Johns, Andy Warhol and Pablo Picasso.