Tuesday, July 05, 2011

Turn the Page...Tuesday

What Matters Most - Luanne Rice
'The annual Children's Home summer beach picnic was on everyone's mind, and the kitchen was bustling.  A ham roasting, to be sliced and served cold;  Dublin Bay prawns, a gift from one of St. Augustine's benefactors, chilling in the huge refrigerator;  fresh-baked bread cooling on the rack;  cookies already packed in baskets.
Kathleen Murphy, thirteen, stood at the long stainless-steel work table, peeling potatoes for potato salad.  Her fingers worked so fast, a total blur to anyone who might be watching.  Her long dark hair was held back in a ponytail, and her clothes were protected by a stiff green apron.  She kept one eye on her work, another on the side door.  Sister Anastasia would be back in five minutes, and if James Sullivan wasn't here by then, there'd be hell to pay.'

Luanne Rice is one of my favorite authors for quick summer beach reads.  This book is one I had picked up at a yard sale last summer but had not gotten around to reading until now.  It takes us from Dublin, Ireland to the Connecticut shoreline following the love and life of two different couples as they try to figure out What Matters Most.  It's a story of true love that never dies and soul mates who are connected over time and space. 

From the back cover:
For Bernadette and Tom it is a return to their roots in Ireland and a love that broke every rule and could have withstood any consequence-but the one that broke their hearts.  For James and Kathleen, whose indelible bond was forged in a Dublin orphanage before one was adopted and carried across the sea to America, it's a reunion they could never see coming, even if they dreamed of it all their young lives.  From the Emerald Isle to the Connecticut shore, four lives are about to come together in a confrontation that will challenge each of them to leave behind the past and all they once thought was important and embrace at last What Matters Most.

A great summer read, but make sure and keep the kleenex's close! 

Daughters of the Witching Hill ~ Mary Sharratt
'See us gathered here, three woman stood at Richard Baldwin's gate.  I bide with my daughter, Liza of the squint eye, and with my grandaughter, Alizon, just fifteen and dazzling as the noontide sun, so bright that she lights up the murk of my dim sight.  Demdike, folk call me, after the dammed stream near my dwelling place where the farmers wash their sheep before shearing.  When I was younger and stronger, I used to help with the sheepwash.  Wasn't afraid of the fiercest rams.  I'd always had a way of gentling creatures by speaking to them low and soft.  Though I'm old now, crabbed and near-blind, my memory is long as a midsummer's day and with my inner eye, I see clear.'

I picked up this novel in Powell Books not long ago.  The write-up on the back of the book intrigued me and I was not disappointed.  The author has done her research well and each character is based on a true person;  many of the scenes based on actual court clerk, Thomas Pott's account of the 1612 Lancashire Witch Trials.  

Bess Southerns is a widow living in Pendle Forest who has built her reputation as a cunning woman;  a woman who can heal the sick and bless others as well as animals.  Her best friend has no such powers, but Bess teaches her what she knows and her friend turns to dark magic to save her daughter from their landlords son, who has terrorized her for years.  As Bess' grandaughter grows, Bess can see that she has the gift as well, but Alizon wants nothing to do with it.  One day Alizon meets a peddler on the road who seems to think she is a prostitute.  Alizon exchanges harsh words with him, cursing the peddler who suddenly falls to the road with a stroke.  The local magistrate is trying to build his reputation as a witch hunter, so locks Alizon up in the dungeon and the witch trials begin. 

This book is written really well, bringing this disturbing time in history to vivid life.  The author lives in Pendle Forest, right where the witch hunt took place.  I think her nearness to the scene lent clarity and depth to the writing .  If historical fiction is one of your passions, than this book should not be missed.

'She was a very old woman, about the age of Foure-score yeares, and had been a Witch for fiftie yeares.  Shee dwelt in the Forrest of Pendle, a vast place, fitte for her profession:  What shee committed in her time, no man knowes...She was a generall agent for the Devill in all these partes:  no man escaped her, or her Furies.'
-Thomas Potts, The Wonderfull Discoverie of Witches in the Countie of Lancaster, 1613


Pop over to Adrienne's Turn the Page Tuesday to see what others have read this last month, and add to your own "want-to-read" list!

4 comments:

Jill said...

The cover of "Witching Hill" is enough to get me interested in this book. Your review makes me ever more interested. It's definitely going on the "must read list". THANKS!

Adrienne said...

Oh wow ... that last one sounds spooky! Interesting ...

Thanks for joining in this month!

Unknown said...

I'm reading Luanne Rice's "Summer Light" right now.
I definatly want to read "Daughters of the witching hill" Could I borrow it from you?

Tipper said...

Both sound like they'd be good reads : )