A Christmas Gift for the East End Library Girls by Patricia McBride
A Christmas Gift for the East End Library Girls by Patricia McBride
There were four boxes. Big Ones. They must have lots of things in them because they were heavy, you could tell by the way the man walked when he carried them in, stooped over, knees bent. He brought them right into Mrs Orchard's house, next door to Clara's, that first evening and put them on the floor in the living room and just left them there...
***
Clara's sister is missing. Angry, rebellious Rose had a row with their mother, stormed out of the house and simply disappeared. Seven-year-old Clara, isolated by her distraught parents' efforts to protect her from the truth, is grief-stricken and bewildered.
Liam Kane, newly divorced, newly unemployed, newly arrived in this small northern town, moves into the house next door, a house left to him by an old woman he can barely remember, and within hours gets a visit from the police. It seems he's suspected of a crime.
At the end of her life Elizabeth Orchard is thinking about a crime too, one committed thirty years ago that had tragic consequences for two families and in particular for one small child. She desperately wants to make amends before she dies.
A Town Called Solace explores the relationships of these three people brought together by fate and the mistakes of the past. By turns gripping and darkly funny, it uncovers the layers of grief and remorse and love that connect us, but shows that sometimes a new life is possible.
***
Many years ago, I read Mary Lawson's novel, Crow Lake. This was prior to me even joining Good Reads which I did in 2008. I cannot really remember much about it, other than that I really enjoyed it, and I notice that at some point I have marked it for a re-read on Good Reads.
A Town Called Solace was suggested as this month's read at my Book Club. I was very keen to read it and it lived up to all of my expectations.
The story is told from three different perspectives. The book starts with seven year old Clara, whose sixteen year old sister, Rose, has gone missing. We also have chapters dedicated to Liam and to Elizabeth Orchard, the neighbour of Clara. These three characters are superbly depicted with distinct voices. There was never any doubt regarding which character I was reading. Each of the three characters were facing challenges in their lives, and they interweaved with one another perfectly.
I enjoyed reading about the secondary characters too, each with a part to play with helping to move the story along. Equally well portrayed and with a hand in helping Clara, Liam and Mrs. Orchard towards the healing which they each need.
Set in the fictional town of Solace, Canada, Ms Lawson has captured the small town feel extremely well. The sometimes claustrophobic nature of such a place is wonderfully depicted and it was easy to think that this place was real. Of course, it was just that the author understood and portrayed the experience of living in a small town so well.
This is one of the best novels I have read this year. I read a library copy of it but am seriously considering buying a copy as it would be a pleasure just to have this on my shelf, with the prospect of reading again at some point.
A brilliant novel which I highly recommend.
ISBN: 978 1529113433
Publisher: Vintage
Formats: e-book, audio, hardback and paperback
No. of Pages: 304 (paperback)
About the Author:
Mary Lawson was born and brought up in the small farming community of Blackwell, near Sarnia, Ontario. Her family had a summer cottage in northern Ontario, in an area of lakes and rocks and forests known as the Canadian Shield. It remains, Lawson says, her favourite landscape, and it has played a major role in her writing.
After graduating from McGill University in Montreal she went to England for a holiday, ran out of money, had to find a job, fell in love with a colleague and married him. They have two sons and live in Kingston upon Thames, near London.
Lawson began writing when her children went to school. For some years she dabbled with short stories, which she sold to women’s magazines, but it wasn’t until she set one of those stories in Canada and was advised by an editor to turn it into a novel that she finally found her voice and discovered what she wanted to write about.
Crow Lake, her first novel, published when Lawson was 55, sold in 28 countries. It spent 75 weeks on the bestseller list in Canada, won the Amazon.ca First Novel Award, was a New York Times bestseller and was chosen as a Book of the Year by the New York Times, The Sunday Times, The Washington Post and The Globe and Mail. The Other Side of the Bridge, her second novel, was long-listed for the Man Booker Prize and was a Richard and Judy Summer Read in the UK. Road Ends, published to critical acclaim in 2014, was a top-ten bestseller, described by the New York Times as “tender and surprising.. a vivid and evocative tale”.
Lawson’s fourth novel, A Town Called Solace, published in February 2021, is another top-ten best seller getting rave reviews, and was longlisted for the Booker Prize.
(author media courtesy of her website http://www.marylawson.ca/bio/)
(all opinions are my own)
Isn't this a brilliant front cover on this book?
I am delighted to be bringing you a promo post on today's blog tour. So, without further ado let me tell you a bit more about the book.
The Blurb
Enigmatic, quirky, moody, demanding, loving, amusing, domineering and determined all apply to Ebony. Follow her life story from a stray kitten to a mature feline, in her own words.
Ebony was just eight months old when she was left to fend for herself on the streets, abandoned and alone. The black cat had to learn how to hunt, find shelter, procure food and protect herself from predators. The experience shaped her personality forever. She became a wily, capable little cat before she was reported to a rescue charity and taken to live in a large wooden hut. She was safe and well fed, but she longed for the freedom to be roaming around in nature, practising the skills she had learnt.
Would she find a home and owners who loved her, not abandon her once again? Could she settle down and be a good domestic cat? This was the quandary for the people who took her and within months she presented them with a bundle of surprises. A novella.
As well as bringing you the story of Ebony, the text is littered with interesting facts and figures about cats in general. If you are a cat lover, this may well be the book for you.
Hello and welcome to this week's cover love feature. It's the place where I, quite literally, judge a book by its cover, prior to reading the blurb. Let's be honest, there are occasions when we pick up a book because it has a great cover.
This gorgeous cover is of Purrfect Murder by Nic Saint. I have a penchant for books with animals on the cover and this cute ginger kitty grabbed my attention.
There are a whopping fifty-eight books in this cosy crime series, beginning with this one which was published in 2017. This number of books in five years is quite an achievement, and I find myself wondering when the author has time to sleep?
Have you ever bought or borrowed a library book based solely on it's cover? Did it live up to your expectations?
There’s something special about Max. He may look like your regular ginger flabby tabby, but unlike most tabbies, he can actually communicate with his human, reporter for the Hampton Cove Gazette Odelia Poole. Max takes a keen interest in the goings-on in their small town, by snooping around with his best friends Dooley, a not-too-bright ragamuffin, and Harriet, a gorgeous white Persian. Their regular visits to the police station, the barbershop and the doctor’s office provide them with those precious and exclusive scoops that have made Odelia the number one reporter in town.But when suddenly the body of a bestselling writer is discovered buried in the last Long Island outhouse, and a new policeman arrives in town to solve the murder, it looks like things are about to change in Hampton Cove. Detective Chase Kingsley doesn’t take kindly to nosy reporters like Odelia snooping around his crime scene or interviewing his suspects. And to make matters worse, he’s got a cat of his own in Brutus, a buff, black bully, who, just like his owner, likes to lay down the law. Soon Brutus isn’t just restricting access to the police station, but he’s putting the moves on Harriet, breaking up the band.Now it’s all Odelia, Max and Dooley can do to try and solve the murder, in spite of Detective Kingsley’s and Brutus’s protestations, and show the overbearing cop and his bullyragging feline how things are done in Hampton Cove. Will Odelia find the killer before Detective Kingsley does? And will Max prevent Brutus from moving in on his territory and taking over the town? Find out in Purrfect Murder, the first book in the new Mysteries of Max series.