The sweet taste of muscadines A novel

Pamela Terry, 1956-

Book - 2021

"In this intimate debut novel, a woman returns to her small Southern hometown in the wake of her mother's sudden death--only to find the past upended by stunning family secrets. Lila Bruce Breedlove never quite felt at home in Wesleyan, Georgia, especially after her father's untimely death when she was a child. Both she and her brother, Henry, fled north after high school, establishing fulfilling lives and relationships of their own, steeped in art and culture. In contrast, their younger sister, Abigail, opted to remain in Georgia to dote on their domineering, larger-than-life mother, Geneva. Yet, despite their years-long independence, Lila and Henry both know they've never quite reckoned with their upbringing. Now, when... their elderly mother dies suddenly and strangely in the muscadine arbor behind the family estate, they must travel back to the town that raised them. But as Lila and Henry uncover more about Geneva's death, shocking truths are revealed that upend the Bruces' history as they know it, sending the pair on an extraordinary journey to chase a truth that will dramatically alter the course of their lives. With deep compassion and sharp wit, Pamela Terry brings to life the culture and expectations of a small Southern town that values appearance over authenticity--and where the struggle to live honestly can lead to devastating consequences"--

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Subjects
Genres
Domestic fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Ballantine Books [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Pamela Terry, 1956- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
288 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780593158456
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Terry's debut begins when Lila Breedlove gets a call from her sister, Abby, who tells her that their mother has died. Immediately Lila and her brother, Henry, fly back to their southern hometown of Wesleyan, Georgia. There they learn that their mother didn't want a funeral and so kept her heart condition a secret. Then Abby has a breakdown and goes in search of the long-lost love that her mother never approved of, while Lila and her childhood friend Melanie, along with Henry and his partner, Andrew, are left behind to unearth family secrets. They search the muscadine arbor where Lila's mother's body was found and discover a box of old letters, including one from their deceased father; curiously this letter is dated after he died. In the letter, he talks about Abby not being his child and expresses his love for his best friend, Charlie, Melanie's father. More letters just complicate the secrets their mother kept, and the group goes in search of answers. This tale of forbidden love, family, and lies will have readers on the edge of their seats until the very end.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Terry debuts with a spellbinding account of long-buried secrets coming to light in the wake of a matriarch's death. Lila Bruce Breedlove, the eldest of the three Bruce children, has long been avoiding her hometown of Wesleyan, Ga., since moving to Rhode Island for college, marrying a former professor, and settling down in Maine. She's the only one of her siblings old enough to remember life before her father was killed in Vietnam, a tragedy that brought a veil of silence and distance over their family. But after her mother dies of a heart attack, Lila returns home. While Lila and her younger brother, Henry, left home after high school, Abigail, the youngest and their mother's favorite, has remained in Wesleyan and continues the traditions of her childhood. As surprises pile up, the siblings begin unraveling their mother's secrets, including the truth about what happened to their father. With stirring prose ("Truth, like beauty, reveals itself as you notice it; the more you see, the more you see") and strong characters, Terry captures the complexities of memory and the difficulties of going home. Fans of Kristin Harmel will want to take a look. (Mar.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

DEBUT Lila Bruce Breedlove's tranquil life in Maine is upended when she learns of the death of her elderly, domineering mother, Geneva. She embarks reluctantly on a return trip to Wesleyan, GA, the small town where she grew up. When she arrives, Lila reunites with the brother she is close to, Henry, and the sister with whom she is not close, Abigail. Lila and Henry had left their small town behind, but Abigail stayed in Wesleyan, taking care of Geneva. Proving to be as chaotic and uncomfortable as expected, Lila's visit goes completely off the rails when, due to the mysterious circumstances of Geneva's death, her mother's lifelong secret is discovered. This leads Lila and Henry on a bittersweet journey to the Scottish Highlands to lift the final veil of the deception they have been living under the majority of their lives. VERDICT Filled with vivid landscape descriptions, Southern charm, and heartfelt familial connections, this novel is sure to please readers, especially fans of Southern women's fiction and family dramas like the works of Mary Kay Andrews and Kristin Hannah.--Karen Core, Detroit P.L.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

One As a child I was afraid of tornadoes. Actually, "afraid" is a puny word to describe how I felt when an unusual stillness would thread the air of a late-­spring afternoon, weaving a blanket of quiet that silenced birdsong and suspended the breeze. The skies over Wesleyan would darken to horror green, and the wind would awaken with the soul of a dervish, causing the pines and poplars to wring themselves into fraying, flailing knots. Though meant for good, the sound of the tornado siren was as welcome as a scream. As the witchy webs of lace curtains reached out for me in the wind, I would run through the house in blind panic, grabbing up my diaries and favorite photos, all the books I could carry, all the while herding a grumbling Henry before me like a wayward sheep. Into our dark rabbit hole of a cellar I would vanish like Alice to wait it out, nervous and shaking, while in my mind's eye I could clearly see the swirling evil coming right down my street, like the dark finger of God, casually tracing a line on the earth. The world was always unchanged when I reemerged, and the next hour or so was spent putting back the treasured items I'd saved from threatened obliteration while enduring the teasing of my family for my oversize, misplaced fear. Then came the afternoon of Lolly Carmichael's seventh-­birthday party. Any party at the Carmichaels' was a dress-­up affair, even seventh-­birthday ones, so I found myself sitting in the back of our family's green Pontiac in a pink, full-­skirted dress with my feet trapped in black patent shoes, riding to the event in a sulk, on a beautiful day in May. As we neared Lolly's house, I felt a bit vindicated when I spied dark clouds rolling in, threatening rain. At least we wouldn't have to endure outside games trussed up in these clothes. But my glee was waning as we pulled up the drive to a giant's footfall of thunder. Egg-­size drops of rain spattered my pink shoulders as I ran up the stairs, my beribboned present tucked underneath my arm. The front door flew open, and Mrs. Carmichael, face white-­tight, called past me to my mother. "Geneva! Get in here! There's a tornado!" My worst fear in the world, and I was away from home in a pink dress. Mama ran inside, and we scrambled to join the rest of the party all huddled together in the center of the family room, away from the windows. A rainbow of balloons floated near the ceiling, a big number 7 written on each one in gold. A stack of presents teetered on the dining-­room table, pink punch waveless in a cut-­glass bowl. The tornado siren blared just then, sending shivers up our bare legs and causing Mary Ann Archer's mother to blurt out, "Oh, Jesus!" in a voice as shrill as the siren itself. "Hush up, Jessie," my mother hissed. Just then, as one, every balloon in the room popped, a sound that shattered our stoicism and uncorked Jessie Archer's full-­throated pleas to the heavens. We scattered like frilly buckshot into every nook and cranny of that house. I grabbed Lolly, who'd frozen to the spot, wailing, and made for the basement along with the more sensible members of the crowd, my mother included. We left Mrs. Archer standing right in front of the window, hands raised in either terror or supplication, I never knew which. If you stick a microphone in the face of someone who's been through a tornado, you can bet money they'll say the familiar line, "It sounded like a freight train." It almost seems a scripted description. But I can empirically say there's a reason for that. From my hiding place that afternoon in Lolly Carmichael's basement, that is precisely the sound I heard as I sat with my head down and my hands clasped around my knees as though bound to a railroad track with no hope of escape. I could hear it coming, hear it hit like a battering ram, hear it continue on, leaving the Carmichael house totally, eerily silent as we waited to breathe again. Mama was the first one back up the stairs. Throwing open the basement door, she gasped when she saw the trunk of a tree sticking like a tongue depressor through the gaping mouth of the living-­room wall. The air smelled sickly strong of pine, and looking up, I could see a nonchalant blue sky already pushing the darkness away to the east. We found Mrs. Archer sprawled across the hooked rug of the family room, her right leg twisted behind her like a strand of spaghetti, her hands still raised to the ceiling, loudly praising God for her salvation, to which Mama replied as she picked up the phone to call for help, "God nothing, Jessie. If you'd been listening to God, you'd have been downstairs with the rest of us with not even a run in your stocking." Mrs. Archer had a slight limp for the rest of her days. Maybe once you've faced down something so frightening, it loses its power over you. I've never been afraid of tornadoes again. And my reaction to the news of my mother's death this morning was not as dramatic as it probably should have been. After all, at eight years old I'd spent an endless afternoon believing her dead. I'd already experienced the shock, the hideous fascination, of her passing. The fact that her death had ended up false didn't lessen all I'd felt that day. Those same feelings now returned to meet Abigail's news, squeezing themselves through telephone wires to grab me around the throat, but being somewhat familiar, their power was lessened. So I didn't sway; I didn't gasp. Instead I asked Abby for the answer to what was, for me at least, the strangest part of the story. What on earth was my mother doing out in the muscadine arbor? In rapid-­fire fashion, Abby told me that's exactly what she wanted to know. She delivered her account with an urgency undiluted by the drawl of her words, which shot through the phone like honey-­coated bullets. "I don't have a clue, Lila. I mean, I thought at first maybe she'd gotten hot and stepped outside to get some fresh air. It's been pretty sticky, though there was a nice breeze last night. But Lord, that air conditioner was running full blast when I got here this morning, so I know she couldn't have been hot. It was cold as a meat locker in this house. And I swear, I don't even know if her bed's been slept in. I mean, it's hard to tell, 'cause she won't make it up every day anymore. Not unless Jackie's coming over to clean. You know how Mama never wants anybody, not even her cleaning lady, to think she needs a cleaning lady, so she always straightens things up before Jackie gets here. They said she'd been dead for about four hours, which means it had to have happened around two in the morning, 'cause I got here at six. I called her before I went to bed to remind her about her hair appointment at eight--­she likes to get it done real early so the heat won't make it fall before she gets back home--­and to tell her I'd be picking her up at the crack of dawn so we could have breakfast out like usual. You know how she loves to eat breakfast out." "Yes. What happened, Abby?" I was trying to hurry this story along even though I knew I hadn't a hope of succeeding. "Well. Everything seemed fine on the phone. She sounded a little peevish, but I'd interrupted a rerun of that John Wayne movie she likes so much, so I figured that was why. You know, the one where he's out looking for that little girl the whole time and when he finds her, she turns out to be an Indian? So anyway, I drove on over this morning real early so we could go to the Pancake Parlor like she likes to. The coffee wasn't on, and the house was as quiet as the grave. Sorry. Wrong choice of words. I'm still upset. Well, you can imagine." Excerpted from The Sweet Taste of Muscadines: A Novel by Pamela Terry All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.