<p>Joanna Howes left Martha’s Vineyard at the age of eighteen and moved to New York City to become a writer. Now in her thirties, she returns to care for her cranky, injured uncle Hank.</p><p>The Vineyard has a split personality—part elite summer resort, part working-class small town—and its two papers reflect the seasonal schism in their reporting. Needing income, Joanna freelances for one Island newspaper<em> </em>(the<em> Journal</em>)<em>,</em> but as it doesn’t cover her bills, she creates an alter ego to write for the rival paper (the<em> Newes</em>).</p><p>All is fine until Joanna is assigned by both papers to report on the same story: a wealthy seasonal resident is suing the town for the right to use his private helicopter. But when Joanna agrees to a cup of coffee with a charming stranger, she has no idea she’s made a date with Orion Smith, helicopter owner. And Orion doesn’t realize Joanna is the niece of his most outspoken critic.</p><p>Witty, engaging, and insightful, <em>On the Same Page</em> is about the half-truths we tell ourselves—and others—when our hearts are on the line.</p> - (HARPERCOLL)
<p>Joanna Howes left Martha's Vineyard at the age of eighteen and moved to New York City to become a writer. Now in her thirties, she returns to care for her cranky, injured uncle Hank.</p><p>The Vineyard has a split personality'part elite summer resort, part working-class small town'and its two papers reflect the seasonal schism in their reporting. Needing income, Joanna freelances for one Island newspaper<em> </em>(the<em> Journal</em>)<em>,</em> but as it doesn't cover her bills, she creates an alter ego to write for the rival paper (the<em> Newes</em>).</p><p>All is fine until Joanna is assigned by both papers to report on the same story: a wealthy seasonal resident is suing the town for the right to use his private helicopter. But when Joanna agrees to a cup of coffee with a charming stranger, she has no idea she's made a date with Orion Smith, helicopter owner. And Orion doesn't realize Joanna is the niece of his most outspoken critic.</p><p>Witty, engaging, and insightful, <em>On the Same Page</em> is about the half-truths we tell ourselves'and others'when our hearts are on the line.</p> - (HARPERCOLL)