THE CURE FOR MODERN LIFE by Lisa Tucker
Atria/Simon and Schuster, April 2008
Matthew and Amelia were once in love and planning to raise a family
together, but a decade later, they have become professional enemies. To
Amelia, who has dedicated her life to medical ethics, Matthew’s job as a
high-powered pharmaceutical executive has turned him into a heartless person
who doesn’t care about anything but money. Now they’re kept in balance only
by Matthew’s best and oldest friend, Ben, a rising science superstar—and
Amelia’s new boyfriend.
That balance begins to crumble one night when, coming home to his upscale
Philadelphia loft, Matthew finds himself on a desolate bridge face-to-face
with a boy screaming for help. Homeless for most of his life, ten-year-old
Danny is as streetwise as he is world-weary, and his desperation to save his
three-year-old sister means he will do whatever it takes to get Matthew’s
help. What follows is an escalating game of one-upmanship between Matthew,
Amelia, and Danny, as all three players struggle to defend what is most
important to them—and are ultimately forced to reconsider what they truly
want.
Dazzlingly written with a riveting story that will resonate with readers
everywhere, Lisa Tucker’s The Cure for Modern Life is a smart, humorous,
big-hearted novel about what it means in the twenty-first century to be
responsible, to care about other people, and to do the right thing.

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