A Novel
Deena's eyes rounded. "You have nothing to do with this
tour? You're the tour director's wife."
"And so?"
"And so, you can't possibly have nothing to do with the
tour. I mean, it's a pretty encompassing job, not your typical nine-to-five."
Pessie snapped her seat belt shut and gazed ahead coolly.
"That's true. But work is work. It's not so fun. You do what you have to
do, right?"
"Rrrright. But like, this job is different. It must be a
pretty exciting, never-a-dull-moment kind of life."
"That's also true."
"There's this massive but hovering on your lips."
Boy, food bloggers were a blunt species.
"No buts," Pessie said tersely.
"Whatever you say. Sorry if I said anything wrong. I was
just trying to picture what it’s like to be in your place."
Pessie didn't know what got into her. The words left her
mouth before she could think twice. "Honestly?" she said. "It's a very lonely
place to be."
When Pessie Hersko's husband Yochi decides to give up his
steady, predictable job as an accountant to work as a tour director, taking frumtravelers to five-star hotels around the world, Pessie's every instinct screams
to squelch Yochi's enthusiasm, and the whole crazy idea in general. Why can't
Yochi see the ridiculousness of pursuing such a job, not to mention the
unfairness of it to his wife and family?
Deena Lizman is a young widow and single mother, whose job
as a food blogger and influencer is jeopardizing her relationship with her
daughter...as well as preventing her from properly feeling and processing her own
jumbled emotions.
Can Pessie summon the inner strength necessary to follow
Yochi wholeheartedly down the off-the-beaten path he has chosen for himself and
their family? And can Deena face the world, including her own self, as the
true, unglamorized Deena, without her flawless #nutsandbasil persona?
In Follow Me, popular author Esty Heller has woven a
compelling novel around the hot topic of social media's effects on ourselves
and our closest relationships. Well-written and peppered with humor, this book
will provide much discussion and food for thought, long after its satisfying conclusion.
By Esty Heller