The next book club meeting will be Wednesday, March 6 @ Ramona's House.
The next book will be The Forgotten Garden by Kate Morton.
From Kirkus Reviews
A four-year-old girl abandoned aboard a ship touches off a century-long
inquiry into her ancestry, in Morton's weighty, at times unwieldy,
second novel (The House at Riverton, 2008). In 1913, Hugh, portmaster of
Maryborough, Australia, discovers a child alone on a vessel newly
arrived from England. The little girl cannot recall her name and has no
identification, only a white suitcase containing some clothes and a book
of fairy tales by Eliza Makepeace. Hugh and his wife, childless after
several miscarriages, name the girl Nell and raise her as their own. At
21, she is engaged to be married and has no idea she is not their
biological daughter. When Hugh confesses the truth, Nell's equilibrium
is destroyed, but life and World War II intervene, and she doesn't
explore her true origins until 1975, when she journeys to London. There
she learns of Eliza's sickly cousin Rose, daughter of Lord Linus
Mountrachet and his lowborn, tightly wound wife, Lady Adeline.
Mountrachet's beloved sister Georgiana disgraced the family by running
off to London to live in squalor with a sailor, who then abruptly
disappeared. Eliza was their daughter, reclaimed by Linus after
Georgiana's death and brought back to Blackhurst, the gloomy Mountrachet
manor in Cornwall. Interviewing secretive locals at Blackhurst, now
under renovation as a hotel, Nell traces her parentage to Rose and her
husband, society portraitist Nathaniel Walker-except that their only
daughter died at age four. Nell's quest is interrupted at this point,
but after her death in 2005, her granddaughter Cassandra takes it up.
Intricate, intersecting narratives, heavy-handed fairy-tale symbolism
and a giant red herring suggesting possible incestcreate a thicket of
clues as impenetrable and treacherous as Eliza's overgrown garden and
the twisty maze on the Mountrachet estate. Murky, but the puzzle is
pleasing and the long-delayed "reveal" is a genuine surprise.
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