Get to know the personal side of nineteenth century and Victorian era painters, poets, artists and authors.
Sunday, January 13, 2019
Remembering my Mom on her birthday
My mom was born on this day in 1942 and passed away from complications to Diabetes one month after my twentieth birthday in 1991. I usually don't share much of my private life but I wanted her to be remembered not only as my mom and best friend but to somehow form a glimpse of who she was. I've written this down it's not a poem or long article but here goes anyway.
It's called, 'Capricorn Girl'
Donna was a shy Capricorn girl born with a spirit of fire and the soul of a tender hearted creative artist. She grew up in 1950s New York City surrounded by Doo Wop and American Bandstand. She studied jazz, tap, and ballet by the time she was nine years old. By age ten, she took diction lessons and memorized Shakespeare's monologues. She adored Audrey Hepburn and was in love with James Dean. Donna was her name, Ooh Donna, Ooh Donna.
Her childhood was far from idyllic. Born with secrets shared with her introverted daughter years later. Secrets I will take to the grave. She never thought herself pretty, didn't seek the spotlight. Her talents were many. With the patience of a saint and a Kathleen Turner voice, she could turn heads wherever she went.
By the time her daughter came along, she gave up an artistic life to have me. A better woman and friend you will never find. She fought her inner demons with grace and won. She fought illness and lost. She taught me many life lessons during our brief twenty years together. Most importantly, never be a follower. It's not about being a leader. It's about knowing who you are and staying true to yourself. She will always be my inspiration. I am most proud to be her daughter and friend.
Tuesday, December 25, 2018
The Lost History of Dreams: A Novel by Kris Waldherr is My Favorite Book of 2018 hasn't been published yet!
The Lost History of Dreams: A Novel by Kris Waldherr has a publication date of April 9, 2019 by Atria Books.
Perhaps not a fair choice; but when I read the arc/review copy earlier this year, I was completely awed by this beautiful novel. So much so, that I read it painfully slowly as not to rush the ending because I didn't want the experience to be over.
My full review is coming up, so I can't say very much except if you love all things gothic, are a Bronte lover, enjoy love stories with multi-layered subtext in 19th century rural England then I implore you to pre-order this one NOW!
All love stories are ghost stories in disguise.
When famed Byronesque poet Hugh de Bonne is discovered dead of a heart attack in his bath one morning, his cousin Robert Highstead, a historian turned post-mortem photographer, is charged with a simple task: transport Hugh’s remains for burial in a chapel. This chapel, a stained glass folly set on the moors of Shropshire, was built by de Bonne sixteen years earlier to house the remains of his beloved wife and muse, Ada. Since then, the chapel has been locked and abandoned, a pilgrimage site for the rabid fans of de Bonne’s last book, The Lost History of Dreams.
However, Ada’s grief-stricken niece refuses to open the glass chapel for Robert unless he agrees to her bargain: before he can lay Hugh to rest, Robert must record Isabelle’s story of Ada and Hugh’s ill-fated marriage over the course of five nights.
As the mystery of Ada and Hugh’s relationship unfolds, so does the secret behind Robert’s own marriage—including that of his fragile wife, Sida, who has not been the same since the tragic accident three years ago, and the origins of his own morbid profession that has him seeing things he shouldn’t—things from beyond the grave.
Kris Waldherr effortlessly spins a sweeping and atmospheric gothic mystery about love and loss that blurs the line between the past and the present, truth and fiction, and ultimately, life and death.
To pre-order Amazon US
Sunday, December 16, 2018
Charlotte Bronte early poem read at The Players Club
Winter Stores
By Charlotte Bronte
- WE take from life one little share,
- And say that this shall be
- A space, redeemed from toil and care,
- From tears and sadness free.
- And, haply, Death unstrings his bow
- And Sorrow stands apart,
- And, for a little while, we know
- The sunshine of the heart.
- Existence seems a summer eve,
- Warm, soft, and full of peace;
- Our free, unfettered feelings give
- The soul its full release.
- A moment, then, it takes the power,
- To call up thoughts that throw
- Around that charmed and hallowed hour,
- This life's divinest glow.
- But Time, though viewlessly it flies,
- And slowly, will not stay;
- Alike, through clear and clouded skies,
- It cleaves its silent way.
- Alike the bitter cup of grief,
- Alike the draught of bliss,
- Its progress leaves but moment brief
- For baffled lips to kiss.
- The sparkling draught is dried away,
- The hour of rest is gone,
- And urgent voices, round us, say,
- " Ho, lingerer, hasten on !"
- And has the soul, then, only gained,
- From this brief time of ease,
- A moment's rest, when overstrained,
- One hurried glimpse of peace ?
- No; while the sun shone kindly o'er us,
- And flowers bloomed round our feet,–
- While many a bud of joy before us
- Unclosed its petals sweet,–
- An unseen work within was plying;
- Like honey-seeking bee,
- From flower to flower, unwearied, flying,
- Laboured one faculty,–
- Thoughtful for Winter's future sorrow,
- Its gloom and scarcity;
- Prescient to-day, of want to-morrow,
- Toiled quiet Memory.
- 'Tis she that from each transient pleasure
- Extracts a lasting good;
- 'Tis she that finds, in summer, treasure
- To serve for winter's food.
- And when Youth's summer day is vanished,
- And Age brings Winter's stress,
- Her stores, with hoarded sweets replenished,
- Life's evening hours will bless.
I recently had the pleasure of reading this poem at a poetry night at The Players Club.
I was also supposed to read a second poem but due to a mix up I could not.
If any Bronte scholars know anything about Charlotte Bronte's early poem, I would be thrilled if you would share it with me.
Sunday, December 9, 2018
Writing workshop and Poetry!
Nuyorican Poet Café
Allen Ginsberg called the café, "the most integrated place on the planet."
Founded in 1973, the Nuyorican Poets Café began as a living room salon in the East Village apartment of writer and poet Miguel Algarin. Over the last 40 years, the Cafe has served as a home for groundbreaking works of poetry, music, theater and visual arts. A multicultural and multi-arts institution, the Café gives voice to a diverse group of rising poets, actors, filmmakers and musicians.
This weekend I attended a writing workshop in the heart of the Lower East Side of New York City. The focus was Social Media for Artists and Writers taught by Capicu Culture co-founders George Torres aka Urban Jibero and Juan Santiago aka Papo Swiggity.
During this two hour session I gained so many useful tips from every subject regarding how to use social media sites to your advantage personally and professionally.
Perhaps my favorite part of the workshop was the writing portion where the subject of how your passion drives you to how your creativity and love for what you do takes shape for you through social media. I wrote about how starting my blog, eight years ago, not only gave me remarkable creative freedom but changed my life forever. So,
I focused on love and when asked to write a poem about how your creativity took shape, this following poem came out immediately. I haven't written poetry since I was twelve years old. I'd like to share it with you all.
Freedom
By Kimberly Eve
I wanted to be heard and not judged
Not whispered about in corners
With snickering and sarcasm
I didn't want the visual attention
Just the audial notation
Instead of fear I was met with warm smiles and sighs
Long phone calls and nights out in cafes
What I discovered by being pushed and kicked through the door
that held my fear was love and acceptance
Please visit Nuyorican Poets Cafe
Saturday, November 3, 2018
You are invited to a party at The Brownings
Poet Laureate Alfred, Lord Tennyson
Albumen print by Julia Margaret Cameron
One of the most enduring friendships of the Victorian era was that of poets Robert Browning and Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Alfred and Emily Tennyson. It lasted throughout their lifetimes. However, I've always wondered how it started?
According to, Alfred Lord Tennyson: A Memoir by his son (Baron Hallam Tennyson) it was Frederic Tennyson, Alfred's older brother who was living in Florence, Italy where his friends The Brownings were visiting at the same time Alfred happened to be there. As it happens, all got on well and as you do both poets said they must get together when they are back in England.
Portman Square, London, England, 1850s
The Brownings lived at 13 Dorset Street at this time
On September 27, 1855, friends such as: Arabella Browning (Roberts sister), Poet Laureate Tennyson, painter Dante Gabriel Rossetti and his brother William Michael Rossetti amongst others gathered at 13 Dorset Street the London home of Robert and Elizabeth Barrett Browning for dinner and poetry readings. Everyone was so excited to hear the poet laureate read from his proof sheets of his new poem, MAUD!
Original very first sketch by Rossetti
drawn during the reading of Maud.
Never presented archived at Birmingham Museum.
As poet laureate Tennyson sat on a sofa next to Elizabeth Barrett Browning reading his poem Maud, quietly sketching away was pre-raphaelite painter Dante Gabriel Rossetti. The above sketch was found on the back of the third and most recognized sketch of Tennyson believed to be the very first drawing. It was never presented to The Brownings that night because the painter wanted to make two more complete drawings; one to be a gift to his girlfriend Lizzie Siddall who loved Tennyson and the final drawing to the hosts of the party.
Second drawing of Tennyson by Rossetti
I hate the dreaded hollow behind the little wood
Have you noticed these words handwritten atop Rossetti's second sketch? It is the first line of opening stanza 1 of Tennyson's Maud but who in the world wrote it? In an interview twenty years later in 1874, poet Robert Browning reminisced about his then beloved deceased wife, Elizabeth Barrett Browning who wrote the words when presented the drawing by Rossetti.
Final version
During Alfred Tennyson's lifetime (1809-1892), when asked if he knew he was being drawn while reading Maud he would only be quoted saying, 'I have no recollection'. This was corroborated by William Michael Rossetti who said in an unpublished letter, 'So far as I remember, the poet laureate, neither saw what my brother was doing nor knew of it afterward'. In an excerpt from Tennyson's own letter diaries written the day after the party (28 September) while still staying with The Brownings,
I dined yesterday with The Brownings and had a very pleasant evening.
Both of them are great admirers of poor little "maud." The two Rossetti's
came in during the evening.'
My favorite fond memory of Tennyson from that night was from party guest, Lady Geraldine,
The close is magnificent, full of power, and there are beautiful thrilling lines all through. If I had a heart to spare, the Laureate would have won mine. (Tennysons voice) like an organ music rather than speech. He stopped every now and then to say, "there's a wonderful touch!"
Sunday, October 7, 2018
Pen Browning: Son of The Pied Piper!
'Pen' Robert Barrett Browning
Robert Wiedeman Barrett Browning (1849-1912) the only son of married poets Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Robert Browning was born in Florence, Italy at their home Casa Guidi on March 9, 1849. This was Elizabeth Barrett Browning's fourth pregnancy after suffering three miscarriages. She attributed this successful pregnancy to the fact that she stopped using laudanum prescribed for her illness. Undiagnosed during her lifetime with such symptoms and complaints as: body weakness, heart palpatations, cannot handle heat and cold and general exhaustion. Today she would be diagnosed with (HKPP) known as hypokalemic periodic paralysis. A muscle disorder where potassium becomes trapped in muscle cells causing blood levels of potassium to fall.
Pen and Elizabeth Barrett Browning by
Fratelli D' Alessandri
19 June 1860
She said of her son, "he's so fat and rosy and strong that almost I am sceptical of his being my child."
Named after his father, "Wiedeman" was their sons paternal grandmother's maiden name. If only she'd known of her grandsons birth. Although the baby was born one week prior to her death, word did not reach her in time. This was something that plagued Robert Browning terribly. The Browning's named their son in part in her memory. Baby Barrett Browning was nicknamed 'Pen' which I incorrectly assumed was related to poetry.
Once again according to Elizabeth Barrett Browning,
"The baby tried pronouncing 'Wiedeman which came out sounding like 'Penini' or 'Pen'."
The name stuck with him throughout his life.
Pen was educated at home, traveling with family between France and England but staying mainly between Florence, Siena, and Rome, Italy. His mother exposed him to various types of art and dressed him in a rather androgynous style until he was at least ten years old. Victorians dressed their boys in velvet, lace, with hair in long curls but usually not after the age of five years old. The Tennyson's did the same with their two sons going against convention. Robert Browning disagreed with this style and after Elizabeth died in 1861, when Pen was twelve years old, he was taken for a haircut and dressed in proper boys clothing.
Pen Browning wearing a kit second to left with John Everett Millais standing profile
his wife Effie and daughter seated below
September\October 1873.
After the death of Robert's beloved wife and because of the enormous depth of his grief, he and Pen returned to London. He said staying in Italy was too painful without her. Although Pen entered Christ Church College, Oxford, he didn't pass his exams. He seemed not to possess his parents drive. He lacked ambition and purpose until a friend of his parents; Pre-Raphaelite painter, John Everett Millais told him that he had a talent for sculpture and painting. Afterwards, Pen went on to study in Paris with Auguste Rodin and in Antwerp, Belgium with Jean-Arnold Heyermans.
Pen painting mid 1885
He never became part of the British art establishment because he enjoyed painting voluptuous female nudes on very large canvases which offended the sensibilities of the prudish Victorians.
Pen and wife, Fannie wedding day
October 4, 1887
Boarding a train to start their honeymoon
Pen married the daughter of a wealthy metal merchant, Fannie Coddington (1853-1935) on October 4, 1887. They lived together in Italy at Palazzo Rezzonico on the grand canal in Venice for two years until the death of his father, Robert Browning in 1889. Sadly, their marriage was no love story. After Fannie found out about her husband's mistress, they led separate lives but never divorced. The marriage was childless. He gave up his career as an artist and continued to paint for the pure love of it. He painted three portaits of his poet father as well as landscape paintings. Oddly enough, his female nude paintings have never turned up anywhere.
Sarianna Browning, 1900
Age 86
Pen Browning remained loyal to the old servants who cared for him as a child as well as looking after his Aunt Sarianna Browning. They all lived with him in Asolo, Italy where he lived out his remaining days. He passed away of a heart attack on July 8, 1912. He was buried in the local cemetery. Leaving no will or descendants, his estranged wife, Fannie Browning along with sixteen Barrett cousins, on his mother's side claimed his estate which was not left in good order. The rest of his possessions were sold at auction during a six day sale at Sotheby's in London in 1913. Fannie then had her estranged husband's body removed from the cemetery in Asolo, Italy, and reburied in the new Protestant cemetery in Florence, Italy, next to his mother and poetess Elizabeth Barrett Browning. Sadly, husband Robert Browning is buried in Westminster Abbey. Fannie Browning is buried in England.
Sunday, August 19, 2018
Lewis Carroll visits The Tennyson's at Farringford for World Photography Day!
Farringford from the Field by Charles Dodgson, 1864.
This photograph is my favorite and my choice for World Photography Day. Thank goodness Lewis Carroll was a photographer as well as author. During his visit to the Isle of Wight in August 1864, he managed to capture Poet Laureate Alfred Tennyson with his wife Emily Tennyson. They are together at the rear side of their home, Farringford. If you crop the photograph and make it of just them together, you will notice Emily sitting in her push chair SMILING at her husband while Alfred talks to her. I wonder if he could've been holding a book of poetry and reading to her as he was known to do according to Emily's journals?
Sunday, July 22, 2018
Charlotte Bronte diary entry, "a day's weary wandering"
It is the still small voice alone that comes to me at eventide, that which like a breeze with a voice in it [comes] over the deeply blue hills & out of the now leafless forests & from the cities on distant river banks of a far & bright continent. It is that which wakes my spirit & engrosses all my living feelings, all my energies which are not merely mechanical, & like Haworth & home, wakes sensations which lie dormant elsewhere.
This is my favorite of Charlotte's diary entries. Written on 4, February, 1836, from Roe Head school, in Mirfield, at the age of nineteen just two months shy of her twentieth birthday and eleven years before the publication of Jane Eyre.
I find it to be one of her most telling and evocative pieces shedding some light onto her inspiration towards her writing process. She writes upon reflection to begin with then towards the end switches to voyeur as she narrates a very erotic imaginative juvenalia writing scene.
Formerly Roe Head School, Mirfield
Well, here I am at Roe-Head. It is seven o’clock at night, the young ladies are all at their lessons, the school-room is quiet, the fire is low, a stormy day is at this moment passing off in a murmuring and bleak night. I now assume my own thoughts; my mind relaxes from the stretch on which it has been for the last twelve hours & falls back onto the rest which no-body in this house knows of but myself.
I now, after a day’s weary wandering, return to the ark which for me floats alone on the face of this world’s desolate & boundless deluge. It is strange. I cannot get used to the ongoings that surround me. I fulfil my duties strictly & well, yet, so to speak, if the illustration be not profane, as God was not in the wind, nor the fire, nor the earth-quake, so neither is my heart in the task, the theme or the exercise. It is the still small voice alone that comes to me at eventide, that which like a breeze with a voice in it [comes] over the deeply blue hills & out of the now leafless forests & from the cities on distant river banks of a far & bright continent. It is that which wakes my spirit & engrosses all my living feelings, all my energies which are not merely mechanical, & like Haworth & home, wakes sensations which lie dormant elsewhere.
Last night I did indeed lean upon the thunder-wakening wings of such a stormy blast as I have seldom heard blow, & it whirled me away like heath in the wilderness for five seconds of ecstasy, and as I sat by myself in the dining-room while all the rest were at tea the trance seemed to descend on a sudden, & verily this foot trod the war-shaken shores of the Calabar & these eyes saw the defiled & violated Adrianopolis shedding its lights on the river from lattices whence the invader looked out & was not darkened.
I went through a trodden garden whose groves were crushed down. I ascended a great terrace, the marble surface of which shone wet with rain where it was not darkened by the mounds of dead leaves which were now showered on & now swept off by the vast & broken boughs which swung in the wind above them.
Up I went to the wall of the palace to the line of latticed arches which shimmered in light, passing along quick as thought, I glanced at what the internal glare revealed through the crystal. There was a room lined with mirrors & with lamps on tripods, & very darkened, & splendid couches & carpets & large half lucid vases white as snow, thickly embossed with whiter mouldings, & one large picture in a frame of massive beauty representing a young man whose gorgeous & shining locks seemed as if they would wave on the breath & whose eyes were half hid by the hand carved in ivory that shaded them & supported the awful looking coron[al?] head—a solitary picture, too great to admit of a companion—a likeness to be remembered full of beauty, not displayed, for it seemed as if the form had been copied so often in all imposing attitudes, that at length the painter, satiated with its luxuriant perfection, had resolved to conceal half & make the imperial Giant bend & hide under his cloudlike tresses, the radiance he was grown tired of gazing on.
Often had I seen this room before and felt, as I looked at it, the simple and exceeding magnificence of its single picture, its five colossal cups of sculptured marble, its soft carpets of most deep and brilliant hues, & its mirrors, broad, lofty, & liquidly clear. I had seen it in the stillness of evening when the lamps so quietly & steadily burnt in the tranquil air, & when their rays fell upon but one living figure, a young lady who generally at that time appeared sitting on a low sofa, a book in her hand, her head bent over it as she read, her light brown hair dropping in loose & unwaving curls, her dress falling to the floor as she sat in sweeping folds of silk. All stirless about her except her heart, softly beating under her satin bodice & all silent except her regular and very gentle respiration.
The haughty sadness of grandeur beamed out of her intent fixed hazel eye, & though so young, I always felt as if I dared not have spoken to her for my life, how lovely were the lines of her small & rosy mouth, but how very proud her white brow, spacious & wreathed with ringlets, & her neck, which, though so slender, had the superb curve of a queen’s about the snowy throat. I knew why she chose to be alone at that hour, & why she kept that shadow in the golden frame to gaze on her, & why she turned sometimes to her mirrors & looked to see if her loveliness & her adornments were quite perfect.
However this night she was not visible—no—but neither was her bower void. The red ray of the fire flashed upon a table covered with wine flasks, some drained and some brimming with the crimson juice. The cushions of a voluptuous ottoman which had often supported her slight, fine form were crushed by a dark bulk flung upon them in drunken prostration. Aye, where she had lain imperially robed and decked with pearls, every waft of her garments as she moved diffusing perfume, her beauty slumbering & still glowing as dreams of him for whom she kept herself in such hallowed & shrine-like separation wandered over her soul, on her own silken couch, a swarth & sinewy moor intoxicated to ferocious insensibility had stretched his athletic limbs, weary with wassail and stupefied with drunken sleep.
I knew it to be Quashia himself, and well could I guess why he had chosen the queen of Angria’s sanctuary for the scene of his solitary revelling. While he was full before my eyes, lying in his black dress on the disordered couch, his sable hair dishevelled on his forehead, his tusk-like teeth glancing vindictively through his parted lips, his brown complexion flushed with wine, & his broad chest heaving wildly as the breath issued in spurts from his distended nostrils, while I watched the fluttering of his white shirt ruffles starting through the more than half-unbuttoned waistcoat, & beheld the expression of his Arabian countenance savagely exulting even in sleep, Quashia triumphant Lord in the halls of Zamorna! in the bower of Zamorna’s lady! while this apparition was before me, the dining-room door opened and Miss W[ooler] came in with a plate of butter in her hand. “A very stormy night my dear!” said she. “It is ma’am,” said I.
Saturday, July 14, 2018
Review: The Essex Serpent by Sarah Perry
When Cora Seaborne’s brilliant, domineering husband dies, she steps into her new life as a widow with as much relief as sadness: her marriage was not a happy one. Wed at nineteen, this woman of exceptional intelligence and curiosity was ill-suited for the role of society wife. Seeking refuge in fresh air and open space in the wake of the funeral, Cora leaves London for a visit to coastal Essex, accompanied by her inquisitive and obsessive eleven-year old son, Francis, and the boy’s nanny, Martha, her fiercely protective friend.
While admiring the sites, Cora learns of an intriguing rumor that has arisen further up the estuary, of a fearsome creature said to roam the marshes claiming human lives. After nearly 300 years, the mythical Essex Serpent is said to have returned, taking the life of a young man on New Year’s Eve. A keen amateur naturalist with no patience for religion or superstition, Cora is immediately enthralled, and certain that what the local people think is a magical sea beast may be a previously undiscovered species. Eager to investigate, she is introduced to local vicar William Ransome. Will, too, is suspicious of the rumors. But unlike Cora, this man of faith is convinced the rumors are caused by moral panic, a flight from true belief.
These seeming opposites who agree on nothing soon find themselves inexorably drawn together and torn apart—an intense relationship that will change both of their lives in ways entirely unexpected.
"In the darkness he grows afraid. There's something there, he feels it, biding its time-implacable, monstrous, born in water, always with an eye cocked in his direction. Out he looks to the black Blackwater and there it is again- something clearing the surface then subsiding - yes, all along its been there, waiting, and at last its found him out. " (New Years Eve, The Essex Serpent)
This is a story of science and religion juxtaposed against Victorian societal norms of the day where the presence of Gothic darkness and malicious intent prevails. What happens in a sleepy, Essex village when, Cora Seaborne, a quiet science loving spinster arrives to research the 300 year old myth of a death seeking serpent? Does such a beast really exist?
Who knew she would be courted by the cold and violent vicar , Will Ransome. Their marriage was volatile to say the least; they were such opposites until Cora meets Luke. He shares her curious spirit but all is not as it seems in the parish village of Aldwinter. If only she knew what she was about to unleash and its wrath would know no bounds.
Sarah Perry writes unlike anyone else. Her writing, phrasing and descriptions are so incredibly beautiful it was as if Wilkie Collins and Daphne du Maurier had a child. Sarah Perry is a wordsmith and I am her captive. Nobody rescue me I am happy living within the pages of her dark, Gothic environments.
Wednesday, July 4, 2018
'A Parody' By Branwell Bronte
A Parody by Branwell Bronte
Manuscript/Artwork/Image
1848
@The Bronte Society
Bronte Parsonage Museum (shelfmark B28)
"Jack Shaw the guardsman and Jack painter of norfolk,"
question - "the half minute time is up, so come to the scratch; won't you?"
answer - "Blast your eyes, it's no use, for I cannot come!"
I find Branwell's sketch a fascinating glimpse into his mind, humor and psyche.
Here we have a young man in bed quite sickly but just look at those muscular arms!
The death skeleton hand on nose or face mocking almost. I mean, its a parody Branwell writes so how seriously do we look at his drawing?
Branwell drew this the year he died but what was his message?
I just wanted to share this drawing because it casts so many thoughts of a young, talented man gone too soon.
To read my older article about Branwell Bronte
Saturday, May 5, 2018
Review: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart by Holly Ringland
The most enchanting debut novel of 2018, this is an irresistible, deeply moving and romantic story of a young girl, daughter of an abusive father, who has to learn the hard way that she can break the patterns of the past, live on her own terms and find her own strength.
An enchanting and captivating novel, about how our untold stories haunt us - and the stories we tell ourselves in order to survive.
After her family suffers a tragedy, nine-year-old Alice Hart is forced to leave her idyllic seaside home. She is taken in by her grandmother, June, a flower farmer who raises Alice on the language of Australian native flowers, a way to say the things that are too hard to speak.
Under the watchful eye of June and the women who run the farm, Alice settles, but grows up increasingly frustrated by how little she knows of her family's story. In her early twenties, Alice's life is thrown into upheaval again when she suffers devastating betrayal and loss. Desperate to outrun grief, Alice flees to the dramatically beautiful central Australian desert. In this otherworldly landscape Alice thinks she has found solace, until she meets a charismatic and ultimately dangerous man.
Spanning two decades, set between sugar cane fields by the sea, a native Australian flower farm, and a celestial crater in the central desert, The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart follows Alice's unforgettable journey, as she learns that the most powerful story she will ever possess is her own.
"One hot afternoon in the kitchen at home, Alice had sat at her mother's feet reading a book of fairytales while Agnes made dinner. Fairytales taught her that when it came to family, things weren't always as they seemed. Kings and queens lost their children like they were odd socks, not finding them again until they grew very old, if they ever found them at all. Mothers could die, fathers could disappear, and seven brothers could turn into seven swans. To Alice, family was one of the most curious stories of all. Overhead, the powdery flour her mother was sifting drifted down onto the pages of Alice's open book. She'd caught her mother's eye. Mama, where's the rest of our family?
Agnes dropped to her knees, holding her finger over Alice's lips. Her eyes darted past Alice toward the lounge room where Clem snored softly. It's just us three, Bun, she said. It always has been. Okay?"
What is your saving grace when you are a married woman being beaten by your husband? What do you do when you have a nine year old daughter, Alice and another on the way? When the sound of the car engine outside your home makes you shake, his footsteps, his eyes, his scent; everything about him terrifies you but you are keeping a family secret, one that will devastate those you love. So, out of protective duty and love you stay knowing that you will not live much longer.
For Agnes Hart, her only solace comes when tending her garden. It comes when teaching her nine year old daughter, Alice about flowers i.e. planting them and understanding their symbolism., meaning and hidden secret language.
Immediately, I was drawn to the language of flowers. Being a lover of how the Victorians used it to communicate secretly. However, author, Holly Ringland does something completely different. Not only do the flowers tell a story, hold a family secret but they keep a mother-daughter bond steadfast, even beyond the grave.
I know what it feels like emotionally and physically to lose your mother at a very young age. I understand nine year old Alice's behavior in the way she never leaves her mother's side, the way her eyes follow her everywhere, the ache to want to protect her and save her knowing you can 't. Then for Alice it becomes a lifelong journey of finding herself, while possibly making some of her mother's mistakes. When Alice meets her grandmother she finds a family home, Thornfield and more flowers that become her family.
I really became fascinated with the Thornfield /June chapters that became vital in Alice's story. I could identify with a grandmother stepping in to help raise Alice as well. Holly Ringland has created such complex characters of substance while bringing their scars to the surface making it impossible for me to completely hate Clem or June later on. I found myself longing to stop by Thornfield for some home cooking and flower lessons. I wanted to pull up a chair, pet the dog, chat with the female flowers too!
The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart is a complex family saga unlike any I've read before. I was proud of the woman Alice Hart became; although, I wanted to shake her by the shoulders when she met Dylan.
I can't wait for Holly Ringland's next novel. Her writing is beautiful. She writes a complete story that isn't wrapped up with a pretty bow at the end and I'm relieved for it.
"One hot afternoon in the kitchen at home, Alice had sat at her mother's feet reading a book of fairytales while Agnes made dinner. Fairytales taught her that when it came to family, things weren't always as they seemed. Kings and queens lost their children like they were odd socks, not finding them again until they grew very old, if they ever found them at all. Mothers could die, fathers could disappear, and seven brothers could turn into seven swans. To Alice, family was one of the most curious stories of all. Overhead, the powdery flour her mother was sifting drifted down onto the pages of Alice's open book. She'd caught her mother's eye. Mama, where's the rest of our family?
Agnes dropped to her knees, holding her finger over Alice's lips. Her eyes darted past Alice toward the lounge room where Clem snored softly. It's just us three, Bun, she said. It always has been. Okay?"
What is your saving grace when you are a married woman being beaten by your husband? What do you do when you have a nine year old daughter, Alice and another on the way? When the sound of the car engine outside your home makes you shake, his footsteps, his eyes, his scent; everything about him terrifies you but you are keeping a family secret, one that will devastate those you love. So, out of protective duty and love you stay knowing that you will not live much longer.
For Agnes Hart, her only solace comes when tending her garden. It comes when teaching her nine year old daughter, Alice about flowers i.e. planting them and understanding their symbolism., meaning and hidden secret language.
Immediately, I was drawn to the language of flowers. Being a lover of how the Victorians used it to communicate secretly. However, author, Holly Ringland does something completely different. Not only do the flowers tell a story, hold a family secret but they keep a mother-daughter bond steadfast, even beyond the grave.
I know what it feels like emotionally and physically to lose your mother at a very young age. I understand nine year old Alice's behavior in the way she never leaves her mother's side, the way her eyes follow her everywhere, the ache to want to protect her and save her knowing you can 't. Then for Alice it becomes a lifelong journey of finding herself, while possibly making some of her mother's mistakes. When Alice meets her grandmother she finds a family home, Thornfield and more flowers that become her family.
I really became fascinated with the Thornfield /June chapters that became vital in Alice's story. I could identify with a grandmother stepping in to help raise Alice as well. Holly Ringland has created such complex characters of substance while bringing their scars to the surface making it impossible for me to completely hate Clem or June later on. I found myself longing to stop by Thornfield for some home cooking and flower lessons. I wanted to pull up a chair, pet the dog, chat with the female flowers too!
The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart is a complex family saga unlike any I've read before. I was proud of the woman Alice Hart became; although, I wanted to shake her by the shoulders when she met Dylan.
I can't wait for Holly Ringland's next novel. Her writing is beautiful. She writes a complete story that isn't wrapped up with a pretty bow at the end and I'm relieved for it.
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