Anyone who says they have only one life to live must not know how to read a book. ~ Author Unknown
Showing posts with label sarah addison allen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sarah addison allen. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
The Peach Keeper by Sarah Addison Allen
It’s the dubious distinction of thirty-year-old Willa Jackson to hail from a fine old Southern family of means that met with financial ruin generations ago. The Blue Ridge Madam—built by Willa’s great-great-grandfather during Walls of Water’s heyday, and once the town’s grandest home—has stood for years as a lonely monument to misfortune and scandal. And Willa herself has long strived to build a life beyond the brooding Jackson family shadow. No easy task in a town shaped by years of tradition and the well-marked boundaries of the haves and have-nots.
But Willa has lately learned that an old classmate—socialite do-gooder Paxton Osgood—of the very prominent Osgood family, has restored the Blue Ridge Madam to her former glory, with plans to open a top-flight inn. Maybe, at last, the troubled past can be laid to rest while something new and wonderful rises from its ashes.
Resonant with insight into the deep and lasting power of friendship, love, and tradition, The Peach Keeper is a portrait of the unshakable bonds that—in good times and bad, from one generation to the next—endure forever.
If, like me, you are intrigued by these society clubs women have in the South, that date back several generations, and wonder why exactly they came about and why they come across like secret members clubs, then The Peach Keeper goes a little distance to try and explain at least one of these societies to us.
Paxton Osgood is such a great character - she makes lists, she's obsessive about them. She's made them all her life. It is a way she controls her life, a way she can make sense of it. She prefers things to be done in a certain way. She's uptight, always well turned out and seems to be very much in charge, of everything. She is easily categorised - always popular in school, she got good grades, she was a social darling. But there is far more to the socialite than we are aware. Reluctant to move away from home, she has a very difficult relationship with her mum. Her dad zones in and out of life, letting his wife control things, as he's no doubt just found it easier to do accept what she wants to do, rather than try and fight her. Paxton, what a great name!, has a twin brother, Colin who, unlike Paxton cannot stand to be at home, with his family. He left Walls of Water to become a landscape architect and makes sure he hardly ever comes home. But this time he does, as Paxton has asked his help in landscaping the gardens at The Blue Ridge Madam, specifically to remove the huge peach tree that grew randomly from the soil near the house, and replace it with something else.
It is when Colin comes back, that he walks into Willa's life. And she's not at all happy. Willa, quiet, unassuming, runs an eco hiking and sports good store. She's lived in Walls of Water all her life, went to college, dropped out of college and moved back after her father's death. Long before that, her family had been as prominent as the Osgood's but in the time of her grandmother they had lost The Blue Ridge Madam and a lot of people had been hurt. Now, with Paxton fixing up the house, she invites Willa along to the opening gala. And Willa definitely doesn't want to go. She wants nothing to do with Madam, with the Osgoods, especially not with Colin. In school Willa used to be the Joker, the prankster, who created havoc. No one knew about it though - she did it quietly, without fuss, and watched the chaos unfold all around her. And then, one of her pranks got blamed on Colin Osgood and for a while she let it go. When she eventually revealed herself everyone was shocked - they couldn't believe it was this quiet girl who had gone about and created this much madness. As a consequence her dad lost his job at school and she blamed herself for basically destroying both their lives.
She's in Walls of Water to do a penance, to make a quiet life for herself, to hide. She refuses to have anything to do with anyone from her old life, goes home, does her laundry, never goes out and basically hides. But it's when Paxton and Colin start interfering in her life, that she stands no chance of remaining a quiet mouse too scared to live her life.
This novel is so well written, the love story between Colin and Willa is so great, along with the cautious friendship between Paxton and Sebastian, that could be more, if only he wasn't gay. The thing about SAA is that she writes characters so well, draws them so finely, and yet she manages to surprise you each time. She also excels at writing relationships and layering them and making this pattern you only see when you close that final cover and sit back and think about things.
Tied in with the story of Willa and Paxton and how their friendship develops is the story of their grandmothers as young women. I was a bit reminded of The Divine Secrets of the YA Ya Sisterhood but this is far better written, I have to say. You get such an amazing sense of place and time through her descriptions and the way the young women came up with a society to strengthen themselves and yet how now, things have changed and the society has become something so very different.
The whole of The Peach Keeper is infused with coffee and glorious food and sunshine and the mystery of the South. If you've liked any of the other books I've ever recommended, you will enjoy and come to love Sarah Addison Allen's writing. There is a magic to her books that transports you - and that's what good writing does, no matter how dull and wet the weather is outside or how miserable you feel in yourself.
Do visit her website - she has recipes and extracts from all her books on there and they make for fun reading!
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
The Girl Who Chased The Moon by Sarah Addison Allen
Emily Benedict came to Mullaby, North Carolina, hoping to solve at least some of the riddles surrounding her mother’s life. Such as, why did Dulcie Shelby leave her hometown so suddenly? And why did she vow never to return? But the moment Emily enters the house where her mother grew up and meets the grandfather she never knew—a reclusive, real-life gentle giant—she realizes that mysteries aren’t solved in Mullaby, they’re a way of life: Here are rooms where the wallpaper changes to suit your mood. Unexplained lights skip across the yard at midnight. And a neighbor bakes hope in the form of cakes.
Everyone in Mullaby adores Julia Winterson’s cakes—which is a good thing, because Julia can’t seem to stop baking them. She offers them to satisfy the town’s sweet tooth but also in the hope of rekindling the love she fears might be lost forever. Flour, eggs, milk, and sugar . . . Baking is the only language the proud but vulnerable Julia has to communicate what is truly in her heart. But is it enough to call back to her those she’s hurt in the past?
Can a hummingbird cake really bring back a lost love? Is there really a ghost dancing in Emily’s backyard? The answers are never what you expect. But in this town of lovable misfits, the unexpected fits right in.
When Emily arrived in Mullaby, North Carolina, she doesn't expect her grandfather to be a giant. He's tall, taller than most people. But he's kind and gentle and is cautious around her. He's not had a teenager around the house for a long time and has no real way how to deal with them. He does however warn Emily about the continuously changing wallpaper in her room. Initially Emily thinks he's joking, but then she sees it for herself and automatically thinks that he's somehow managed to super-quickly change the wallpaper, which is an impossibility because he no longer does stairs very well and confines himself to the downstairs. Added to the ever-changing wallpaper to suit her mood, there is the weird lights in the garden that she sees almost from the start of her stay in Mullaby. They are, according to her grandfather and others that she speaks to, just one of the strange things that happen in Mullaby.
Another strange thing in Mullaby is Emily and her grandfather's neighbour, Julia. Julia has a gift for baking and she seems to bake all the time. She is the owner of a restaurant in the town, but doesn't really run it. She goes in super early, to get baking for the day, then leaves pretty soon as the first customers come in. And there is something a bit magical about Julia's baking. Emily and Julia, despite their age difference, become good friends. And when Emily finds out that her mum, now passed away, used to treat Julia quite badly, she feels bad. And the more she finds out about how nasty her mum used to be to people in Mullaby, the more shocked she becomes because the person she knew, loved and grew up with was maybe not the kindest person in the world, she definitely went out of her way to do good. Who her mum used to be as a teenager and who Emily knew her to be as an adult is a million thousand miles apart.
And when the full extent of what her mum did to cause the entire town to hate her, is revealed to Emily, it blows her world apart. She has to finish high school in Mullaby but doubts that she'll be able to set a foot outside her door. What complicates matters is the fact that she has a growing attraction to a young man who lives in Mullaby and because of what her mum did to the boy's family, she is reviled and persona non grata.
Julia's story is woven in with Emily's. Both of them are broken in some way. Julia's story is one we find out about much later in the book yet it is the one that had the most impact on me as a reader. I loved her story, I loved how things worked out for her, especially near the very end.
Sarah Addison Allen is one of my all time favourite writers. There is something about her writing that makes me yearn to be a better writer, to weave intricate characters the way she does. I fall in love with them EVERY SINGLE TIME and sob my heart out when I finish reading them. And then I want to somehow unread them, so I can fall in love with them all over again. I don't know how to describe her writing. It's lyrical and beautiful and charming and funny, but it is also literary and thoughtful and magical and so full of what-ifs, yet you never stop to think: oh, that's not possible in the Real World. I love that and can't press her books on you with enough enthusiasm. I am doing her disservice saying this but if you've watched Practical Magic and even read the novel by Alice Hoffman, you may get a faint inkling what you let yourself in for when you fall in love with Sarah Addison Allen's writing.
My next review will be The Peach Keeper, also by SAA. Because I went into a frenzy and just had to read the newest one too.
Wednesday, November 05, 2008
Garden Spells by Sarah Addison Allen

Synopsis
Welcome to Bascom, North Carolina, where everyone has a story to tell about the Waverleys. There's the house that’s been in the family for generations, the walled garden that mysteriously blooms year round, and the wild rumors of dangerous loves and tragic passions. Claire has always clung to the Waverleys’ roots, tending the enchanted soil in the family garden from which she makes her sought-after delicacies. She has everything she thinks she needs, until one day she wakes to find a stranger has moved in next door and a vine of ivy has crept into her garden... and Claire’s carefully tended life is about to run gloriously out of control.
I cannot recommend this book highly enough. I picked up Garden Spells in a fit of desperation yesterday (Tuesday) morning as I was leaving the house for my commute into work - I couldn’t find the book I was currently reading, so I grabbed the next book in the TBR pile. I started reading it on the station platform, waiting for my invariably late train. I read it during lunch yesterday and on my way to the doctor’s late yesterday afternoon and then finished it last night, after my whole being demanded I finish it, so I could have a good night’s rest. I had to know what happened.
The book’s two main characters Sydney and Claire, the current Waverleys in Bascom, are wonderfully sharply drawn characters in book that abounds with a wistful strangeness I’ve last seen whilst reading the original Practical Magic by Alice Hoffman. There are many comparisons with Practical Magic, both the movie and the book, but Garden Spells remains its very own work of delightful fiction. I can even dare to say there are hints of The Divine Secrets of the Ya Ya Sisterhood by Rebecca Wells but again, it is not self-indulgent or even as dark as YY.
It examines closely the relationship between two very different girls birthed to a selfish and peculiar mother. You get very personal vignettes of how their lives used to be and how they worked towards changing it. Sydney particularly demands your empathy but you do not ever pity her because she is a fighter, she walks away from a truly destructive relationship with her young daughter, Bay and you cheer her on as she makes her deserved escape home, to Bascom, and to her sister Claire.
Claire’s strangeness is handled beautifully. Her unique abilities as a culinary magician (in more ways than just the literary sense) is well known and people come to her for remedies. She is the secret keeper in Bascom, the wise woman, the one everyone knows, yet very few feel inclined to make friends with her. She is an enigma, odd, weird, strange…and happy to remain so, until the new neighbour makes his intentions perfectly clear – he likes her, a lot, and nothing will stand in his way.
The books is wonderfully uplifting and great fun to read – I laughed and cried and woke up this morning feeling ontop of the world, even though I am not Barack Obama! Sarah Addison Allen has a deft touch, turning the weird and the magic into something believable but never ever into the mundane. There is a sense of awe about the mysteries the girls’ have inherited, they treat their gifts lightly and never over-think their gifts. Bascome sounds like my kind of town, filled with unique characters that never grate in their strangeness. Their oddness is not held up in a way so that you can laugh at them in a derisive way, it’s used to show you that it is okay to be a little bit on the odd-side because it is what makes us unique and different and fun to be around.
Garden Spells is a delightful read, something to pick up on a day when you might not be feeling yourself or if you are in the mood to challenge your outlook or preconceptions! I can guarantee you will enjoy it. Especially if you are a foodie – some of Claire’s creations in the book can be found at the author’s website here. Garden Spells was published in the UK by Hodder Paperbacks in May 2008. A new novel by Sarah Addison Allen, The Sugar Queen, can also now be purchased in the UK from online retailers and bookshops.
Welcome to Bascom, North Carolina, where everyone has a story to tell about the Waverleys. There's the house that’s been in the family for generations, the walled garden that mysteriously blooms year round, and the wild rumors of dangerous loves and tragic passions. Claire has always clung to the Waverleys’ roots, tending the enchanted soil in the family garden from which she makes her sought-after delicacies. She has everything she thinks she needs, until one day she wakes to find a stranger has moved in next door and a vine of ivy has crept into her garden... and Claire’s carefully tended life is about to run gloriously out of control.
I cannot recommend this book highly enough. I picked up Garden Spells in a fit of desperation yesterday (Tuesday) morning as I was leaving the house for my commute into work - I couldn’t find the book I was currently reading, so I grabbed the next book in the TBR pile. I started reading it on the station platform, waiting for my invariably late train. I read it during lunch yesterday and on my way to the doctor’s late yesterday afternoon and then finished it last night, after my whole being demanded I finish it, so I could have a good night’s rest. I had to know what happened.
The book’s two main characters Sydney and Claire, the current Waverleys in Bascom, are wonderfully sharply drawn characters in book that abounds with a wistful strangeness I’ve last seen whilst reading the original Practical Magic by Alice Hoffman. There are many comparisons with Practical Magic, both the movie and the book, but Garden Spells remains its very own work of delightful fiction. I can even dare to say there are hints of The Divine Secrets of the Ya Ya Sisterhood by Rebecca Wells but again, it is not self-indulgent or even as dark as YY.
It examines closely the relationship between two very different girls birthed to a selfish and peculiar mother. You get very personal vignettes of how their lives used to be and how they worked towards changing it. Sydney particularly demands your empathy but you do not ever pity her because she is a fighter, she walks away from a truly destructive relationship with her young daughter, Bay and you cheer her on as she makes her deserved escape home, to Bascom, and to her sister Claire.
Claire’s strangeness is handled beautifully. Her unique abilities as a culinary magician (in more ways than just the literary sense) is well known and people come to her for remedies. She is the secret keeper in Bascom, the wise woman, the one everyone knows, yet very few feel inclined to make friends with her. She is an enigma, odd, weird, strange…and happy to remain so, until the new neighbour makes his intentions perfectly clear – he likes her, a lot, and nothing will stand in his way.
The books is wonderfully uplifting and great fun to read – I laughed and cried and woke up this morning feeling ontop of the world, even though I am not Barack Obama! Sarah Addison Allen has a deft touch, turning the weird and the magic into something believable but never ever into the mundane. There is a sense of awe about the mysteries the girls’ have inherited, they treat their gifts lightly and never over-think their gifts. Bascome sounds like my kind of town, filled with unique characters that never grate in their strangeness. Their oddness is not held up in a way so that you can laugh at them in a derisive way, it’s used to show you that it is okay to be a little bit on the odd-side because it is what makes us unique and different and fun to be around.
Garden Spells is a delightful read, something to pick up on a day when you might not be feeling yourself or if you are in the mood to challenge your outlook or preconceptions! I can guarantee you will enjoy it. Especially if you are a foodie – some of Claire’s creations in the book can be found at the author’s website here. Garden Spells was published in the UK by Hodder Paperbacks in May 2008. A new novel by Sarah Addison Allen, The Sugar Queen, can also now be purchased in the UK from online retailers and bookshops.
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