Things that grow

Meredith Goldstein

Book - 2021

The Boston Globe "Love Letters" columnist and author of Chemistry Lessons follows the experiences of a girl who learns about life and love while on a road trip to scatter her late grandmother's ashes in favorite gardens.

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YOUNG ADULT FICTION/Goldstei Meredith
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Subjects
Genres
Bildungsromans
Novels
Published
Boston : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Meredith Goldstein (author)
Physical Description
329 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781328770103
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

After Lori's grandmother, also her guardian, passes away, Lori reluctantly returns to stay with her mother in an unstable lifestyle, leaving her friends--and the boy she wishes were more than a friend--behind. As she prepares to spread her grandmother's ashes in the gardens the woman loved, Lori must learn about love, life, and family before she's able to move on. Goldstein (Chemistry Lessons, 2018) offers doses of humor amid a story that explores grief and growth. Readers with an interest in literature and gardening will be especially delighted by the details that fill out Lori's experiences as she navigates relationships and unexpected challenges with her mother, uncle, and best friend. Lori's strong moral compass adds an air of maturity, while a strong sense of place brings realism and spirit to the novel. Readers with an interest in complicated relationships, grief, and contemporary stories of the heart, like Morgan Matson's Since You've Been Gone (2014), will cherish Things That Grow.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 7 Up--In the summer before her senior year of high school, Lori's world turns upside down when she loses her favorite person: her Dorothy Parker--enthusiast, retired English teacher, garden-loving Grandma Sheryl. Lori has lived with her grandmother since her mom spends much of her time bouncing from job to job. Her grandma's last wish? To be cremated and scattered near things that grow. Accompanied by her fun-loving writer uncle, Seth, and her best friend and object of her affection, Chris, Lori is determined to honor her grandmother by visiting all of her favorite gardens. Meanwhile, she tries to figure out a plan to stay in Massachusetts after her mom insists she move with her to Maryland for her senior year. Full of emotion and, at times, surprisingly humorous, this novel explores the devastating impact of loss and the different ways people are affected by grief. While serving up an honest depiction of loss, this novel provides the perfect balance between the serious and the lighthearted. The principal characters of Lori, Seth, and Chris are all well written, and their interactions with one another are genuine. Despite a lackluster conflict between Lori and Seth, it's interesting to see the characters develop throughout. While imperfect, Goldstein creates a memorable story with a massive amount of heart. Lori is white and Jewish, and Chris is Black. VERDICT A strong contender for those seeking meaningful stories about love, loss, and grief.--Amanda Harding, Elmwood Elem. Sch., Wauconda, IL

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A grandmother's last request leads to an unconventional garden tour. When Lori's maternal grandmother, Sheryl--with whom she had been living in Massachusetts for several years--dies unexpectedly, Lori loathes the idea of moving away to Maryland to live with her flighty mom and mom's latest boyfriend. Not wanting to be uprooted, she's intent on finding a way to stay put to complete her senior year of high school, especially since she's secretly in love with her neighbor and best friend, Chris. Meanwhile, Sheryl's will requests that she be cremated, an unusual directive because they are Jewish, a plot point inspired by the author's own late mother. Sheryl wished for her ashes to be distributed among things that grow--and she included a list of suggested gardens. Lori's uncle Seth helps with the arrangements, and they travel to all four locations to discreetly scatter her ashes--but of course not everything goes as planned. The romance takes an agonizing slow-burn back seat through much of the book, but eventually it all comes together in a satisfying conclusion. Sharp wit and clever details pull this story out of the weeds of becoming just another grief narrative, and Goldstein's writing blossoms in its portrayal of messy, complicated relationships. Lori is White, and Chris is Black. A charming story that promises to delight. (Fiction. 14-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 We're the only two Jews--accompanied by one agnostic Christian--in Walsh's Funeral Home, a very Irish Catholic business near Hoppy's Liquor Store in Framingham.       My uncle Seth, my best friend, Chris, and I sit on one side of a stony gray conference table staring at the same horrendous thing: the massive crucifix hanging on the wall across from us.       "It's frightening," I whisper, because it is.       The cross, with Jesus pinned to it, has to be four feet tall and just as wide. Jesus's miserable face looks like it's made of porcelain. There are tiny cracks on his forehead, spreading like spiderwebs just under his thorny crown. Blood is coming from his eyes.       "Jeeeee-sus," Uncle Seth says, his own face sour as he narrows his eyes to examine Jesus's anguished expression.       "Indeed, it is," I say.       "He could not look more . . . unpleasant, " Seth adds, waving his hand toward the sculpture.       "He's having a very bad day," I say, and Seth smirks at my understatement.       Seth's graying black hair sticks up in all directions. My uncle is the coolest person in my family, now that Grandma Sheryl is dead. He usually looks New York sleek, like a distinguished man in an advertisement for a watch, but right now he's red-eyed and messy, and so am I. I know from a recent trip to the funeral home bathroom that my cat eyeliner has spread across my face and is inching its way to my ears. I can smell my own armpits. There are hospital cafeteria blueberry muffin crumbs stuck between my teeth.       We're doing the best we can. We just lost our matriarch, the best person in the world.       Chris shifts in his seat next to me. Our commentary about Jesus has made him uncomfortable. He taps his foot on the floor before he responds.       "They can't make a crucifix where Jesus is, like, smiling," he says, keeping his voice just above a whisper. "He's literally dying on the cross."       Chris, whose family helped found the new Black church off Route 9, isn't sure what he believes anymore, but he knows the rules of Christianity and still tries to follow them when he can. He lives in the kind of house where you say grace before eating yogurt. He does not take the Lord's name in vain.       His mother, Grace Burke, is a tall woman with flawless dark brown skin and the world's highest cheekbones, which she passed down to her sons. She loves to remind me, like every few weeks, that Jesus was a Jew, and that when the "time comes" (by this, I like to assume, she means the alien apocalypse), I, too, will be saved. I tell her this is good to know.       Seth nods his acquiescence on the Jesus point but continues. "Okay, fine, he's being crucified, it's horrible, I get it, but who wants to look at this in a funeral home, of all places? It's so bleak. "       "It's exactly where Christian people want to look at something like this," Chris--whose name is literally Christian--explains. "For somebody like my mom, a crucifix is a comfort. She believes it's a reminder that Jesus died to save us."       "I get that," I volunteer, "but I don't like that this particular Jesus has a body made of so many different materials. His face is clearly breakable, but his stomach is, like, plastic. His fingers are made of fabric. He's . . . Franken-Jesus."       Seth erupts, letting out an exhausted cackle. "Good line, Lor. You should write that down and use it for something."       And with that--even on what is probably one of the worst days of my life--I am floating. I am a ray of light. I am a genius.       Uncle Seth has written two novels and teaches creative writing to college students at some of the best schools in New York. He doesn't just throw out compliments, so when he likes my work, it makes me feel invincible. Like I can see my future. It looks a lot like his life, hopefully.       "Franken-Jesus," I repeat as I text it to myself so I don't forget.       "Let's try to keep it down," Chris says, noticing that people are walking by the door. "There are grieving families looking at coffins in the next room."       It's true. When we entered Walsh's Funeral Home, the three of us huddled together as if we were embarking on a haunted house tour, we passed a room full of coffins, with sad-looking families perusing them in rows. Most of the coffins had brownish wood with a soft satin interior--but there was one shiny white one with silver trim that reminded me of the cheesy white limos some kids rent for prom. I imagined that it might have fluorescent lights inside. Maybe when you close the lid of the white party coffin, it plays EDM.       I grin, hearing the coffin beats in my head, but I keep that thought to myself. I don't want to say anything else that will make Chris uncomfortable. There are crucifixes here, which means this is his world, not mine.       I take a closer look at him to see how he's holding up, and I can't help but notice his perfect ears. I would like to trace them with my finger.       I shake my head, as if the action will knock every forbidden thought I have about my best friend out of my system, and I focus on Uncle Seth instead. I can't figure out how he is related to my mom, let alone that he is her twin brother. They look the same, I guess. They have curly dark hair that's turning white at the same speed. They're both compact and fit.       But they couldn't be more opposite in every way that counts. Seth is hilarious and talented and dedicated to his one passion. He has the world's most perfect relationship with his partner, the very dashing--and very British--Ethan. Seth travels the world and sends me a keychain from every place he visits.       Meanwhile, my mom is, as Grandma Sheryl used to say, still searching for her rudder. She goes from job to job, claiming that each one is her destiny. She is a life coach who pretty much reads only self-help books, and she preaches about them to everyone around her. She's on her sixth boyfriend in five years, and goes all in with every single one of them.       She's so messy as a parent that she's not even here right now. Her own mother died more than twenty-four hours ago, and somehow she's still trying to figure out how she'll get from Maryland to Massachusetts. It's only eight hours away, and there are a zillion flights between Baltimore and Boston. Also, she has a car. This isn't that difficult.       Seth reads my mind and tries to soothe my anger. "Five bucks says Becca arrives tonight. In a matter of hours," he says, then tucks a stray piece of hair behind my ear. He gives me a sad smile.       "Ten says we don't even see her today," I tell him. "It's okay," I add. "You're doing a very good job."       Seth exhales.       "I know you probably have a lot of questions right now about what happens next," Seth says.       Chris's foot starts tapping as fast as a rabbit's. We both know this has been coming.       I've been living with Grandma Sheryl instead of with my mother since the start of high school. After Mom changed jobs and cities for the zillionth time, everyone agreed (albeit reluctantly, on my mom's part) that living with Grandma would give me stability. Mom would visit on weekends when she could. Honestly, letting me go is the best decision she's ever made.       But now, without Grandma Sheryl, where will I live? I have one more year left of high school, the most important one of all. I don't want to leave this place that has become home.       Seth watches me panic. I'm doing the thing where I pull on my eyebrows.       "Don't think about it now," he says. "It's not a question for today." He tries to change the subject. "How did you get so tall? As of this visit, you could absolutely take me in a fight."       I laugh because it's true. I am five foot nine now, which makes me as tall as Chris and about an inch taller than my uncle. Four inches taller than my mom, his twin, and I look nothing like either of them.       I'm blond and so pale that sometimes you can see the veins in my forehead. Also, I am not an athlete. Grandma Sheryl always said I was "full-figured--like the statue of a goddess!" but all that means is I can't go anywhere without a high-quality bra, and that if something is on a high shelf, I can usually reach it.       Based on what's available on the internet, I know I look more like my father, who works in sales, lives in Florida, and recently ran a 5K to benefit a colitis foundation. Good for him.       The door to the room swings open all the way, and the man who enters must be Mr. Walsh.       The owner of Walsh's Funeral Home looks exactly the way I thought he would, based on our phone call: pasty white skin, dull white hair, an ill-fitting suit, a chin that blends into his neck. He wears a shamrock pin on his lapel.       "You must be the Seltzers," he says, wearing a sympathetic smile that must be plastered on his face all day in this kind of job. "Can I get anyone anything? Water? We have some individually wrapped bags of pretzels."       "No, thank you," Uncle Seth says. "I'm Seth Seltzer. This is my niece, Lori, and her friend, Chris."       Mr. Walsh shakes our hands, his eyes stopping at my purplish hair, which is in a messy bun. I did not intend to dye my hair purple, but what was "russet red" on the box turned out to be eggplant on me. The color won't wash out, and now my roots are coming in light blond again. Just a few hours before she died, Grandma Sheryl said that my head was beginning to remind her of a blackberry ice cream cone. That made me kind of like it.       "It's so nice to meet you, Lori," Mr. Walsh says, giving me the warmest smile and then turning to Seth. "I had such a lovely talk with your niece on the phone. It sounds like her grandmother--your mother--was a wonderful woman."       "She was," Seth says, his voice cracking.       "It also sounds like she was a voracious reader with quite a green thumb!" Mr. Walsh adds.       Seth looks too heartbroken to confirm this. He's barely nodding, so I come to his rescue.       "She was a retired English teacher who liked to garden," I say. "After she retired, it was all books and plants."       "Well, those are two wonderful things," Mr. Walsh responds.       He takes the seat across from us at the table, his body obscuring Jesus's so it now looks like he's the one on the crucifix. He places a laminated spiral notebook on the table, and it reminds me of a Cheesecake Factory menu. On the cover it says AFTERLIFE in all capital letters over a picture of a harp.       The harp is surrounded by shamrocks.       "You guys really like shamrocks," I say, and Seth bites his lip, trying not to laugh.       "Sorry," I add to Mr. Walsh, knowing that he probably thinks I'm making fun of him. I truly was just noticing that they do really like shamrocks here. The sign out front has a shamrock in place of the apostrophe in Walsh's.       Sometimes I sound sarcastic when I don't mean to be.       "This catalogue outlines our array of services," Mr. Walsh says after a nod, and he opens the binder to the second page, where there's a cheesy cartoon drawing of an old man rowing a boat by himself.       Chris and I make eye contact as soon as we see it, and I can tell that he wants to redraw the picture on the spot. He's the best artist I know, and he illustrates everything I write. Our thing is fantasy and sci-fi, and we're the cofounders and editors of the N-Files, a short-story journal that comes out four times a year. We write our own stuff and accept submissions from other students.       Chris says he draws my ideas, but often it's the other way around. I'll come up with some story about sentient robots, or a population of superintelligent gnomes who spend their days undoing stupid decisions made by humans, but his illustrations wind up being so good that I end up rewriting the whole thing to match his vision. It's our process.       My best friend could make major improvements to the drawing of this man in the catalogue rowing himself into the afterlife. I can see Chris mapping out the work in his head, his eyebrows moving up and down with every new idea. His long fingers twitch, as if he's trying to stop himself from reaching for the pen I know is in his backpack. His self-restraint is adorable.       I am so horribly in love with Chris that I want to crawl into a coffin.       As if he's reading my mind, Mr. Walsh flips to the next page in the binder, which shows dozens of photographs of coffins, most of which are similar to the ones we saw in the front room of the funeral home. Each image has a price next to it--most of the coffins are $1,500 or more--and I silently thank Grandma Sheryl for bypassing this option. It seems like a waste, and it would stress me out to have to choose one of these boxes.       With another flip we're at a page that has pictures of white doves. Living, breathing, flying doves. Apparently you can have "doves of peace" released at your loved one's funeral.       One of the images shows a white middle-aged blond woman with a sensible haircut who is standing in a cemetery in the middle of a bunch of tombstones. She's holding her hands open, and two doves are flying right out of them. She looks delighted by the experience; she's actually beaming. I imagine her exclaiming, "My spouse is dead! But look at these fucking birds!"       My eyes go wide at the price next to the picture.       "Um--is it eight hundred dollars per dove, or does that money cover, like, multiple doves?" I ask, and Seth swallows a laugh. He thinks I'm just messing around, but a small part of me is desperate to release some doves in Grandma Sheryl's honor.       "Usually there are two for that price," Mr. Walsh says without looking up.       He knows we're not here to spend $800 on doves. He knows we're not even going to have a funeral.       "You said you plan to scatter Sheryl's remains?" he asks, trying to move this along.       We all nod.       "Well, like I said on the phone, Miss Seltzer, we can help you with that." Mr. Walsh smiles at me reassuringly. "Let me tell you how cremation works." Excerpted from Things That Grow by Meredith Goldstein 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.