Noah is a most engaging character who is unimpressed with striving for
success no matter the cost. He is a blue-collar worker who spends an unexpected
inheritance on restoring a beautiful plantation home. He is a hard worker
in whatever he engages himself, but will never be sucked into a job that
keeps him away from nature and the beauty of poetry. Allie says in her
final letter to him, I love you for many things, especially your passions
. . . Love and poetry and fatherhood and friendship and beauty and nature.
All of these wonderful traits are ultimately what make her reject a life
with Lon for one of spiritual love and adventure with Noah.
She is the young woman who faces the challenge of defying the life she
has been told she must live in order to connect with her soul mate, Noah
Calhoun. She spends a wonderful summer with him, loses her virginity to
him, and then loses him for fourteen years. When she sees an article on
his house, she is compelled to find him again and either tell him she
is engaged or reconnect their love for each other. When Noah sees her
again, he knows that she is still the wonderful woman he has missed for
the last fourteen years. He describes her best: a lover of life, a strength
to those who shared in her friendships. She is a dream, a creator of happiness,
am artist who has touched a thousand souls. She's led a full life and
wanted for nothing because her needs are spiritual and she has only to
look inside her. She is kind and loyal, and she is able to see beauty
where others do not. She is a teacher of wonderful lessons, a dreamer
of better things.
Essentially a good and decent man, Lon courts Allie ardently, but once
he has won her, she takes second place to his blossoming career as a lawyer.
He spends many nights at work and only reserves one night a week when
they can be together. Allie knows she is second in his priorities, but
sees his better qualities and even though she knows their relationship
lacks passion, she believes he offers her compatibility and companionship.
She thinks she can live with that until she reconnects with Noah. Only
then does Lon know what he is about to lose. He follows her to New Bern
and tries desperately to convince her that he can change and be the kind
of husband she wants, needs, and deserves. However, it is too little and
too late. Allie chooses Noah. To his credit, Lon accept the loss as a
gentleman, but Noah knows exactly how devastated he must have been when
she turned away from him.
The first and the last chapters of the novel are narrated by Noah, who is now eighty years old and living in a nursing home with Allie, who is stricken with Alzheimer's disease. His reading of the notebook to Allie in hopes of restoring her memories is the basis of a third person point of view presentation of Allie and Noah's love story. The way their love overcomes even disease is resolved in the final chapter.
This is a romance and as such tends to a somewhat sugary story that may seem unrealistic to many readers. However, it is also a very poignant plot that allows the reader to suspend his disbelief and believe in miracles.
Clapsaddle, Diane. "TheBestNotes on A Long Way Gone".
TheBestNotes.com.
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