The girl in the garden A novel

Melanie Wallace, 1949-

eAudio - 2017

When June arrives on the coast of New England, baby in arms, an untrustworthy man by her side, Mabel-who rents them a cabin-senses trouble. A few days later, the girl and her child are abandoned. June is soon placed with Mabel's friend, Iris, in town, and her life becomes entwined with a number of locals who have known one another for decades: a wealthy recluse with a tragic past; a widow in mourning; a forsaken daughter returning for the first time in years, with a stranger in tow; a lawyer, whose longings he can never reveal; and a kindly World War II veteran who serves as the town's sage. Surrounded by the personal histories and secrets of others, June finds the way forward for herself and her son amid revelations of the others...' pasts, including loves-and crimes-from years ago. In vivid, nuanced prose, Melanie Wallace - a writer with a tender regard for the marginal, the missing and the lost - explores the time-tested bonds of a small community, the healing power of friendship and love, and whether the wrongs of the past can ever be made right.

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Subjects
Published
[United States] : HighBridge 2017.
Language
English
Corporate Author
hoopla digital
Main Author
Melanie Wallace, 1949- (author)
Corporate Author
hoopla digital (-)
Other Authors
Elise Arsenault (narrator)
Edition
Unabridged
Online Access
Instantly available on hoopla.
Cover image
Physical Description
1 online resource (1 audio file (7hr., 46 min.)) : digital
Format
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
ISBN
9781681683454
Access
AVAILABLE FOR USE ONLY BY IOWA CITY AND RESIDENTS OF THE CONTRACTING GOVERNMENTS OF JOHNSON COUNTY, UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS, HILLS, AND LONE TREE (IA).
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Wallace's (The Housekeeper, 2006) poignant novel is, at once, a portrait of a small, coastal, New England town; a bit of a mystery; and a completely engaging study of an odd mix of characters whose lives become intricately intertwined. There's June, a young single mother who's deposited along with her infant son in the nameless village by the boy's father, who then disappears. She's taken in by Mabel, recently widowed, who rents out the string of seaside cottages where June now lives. Roland is Mabel's steadfast friend who helps keep the cottages going with undemanding constancy. Mabel's longtime friend Iris has a shocking past, is now a recluse, and hasn't seen her daughter, Claire, since she was 14 and left to seek her fortune as a photographer. Iris' lawyer has pined for Claire for two decades, and a badly disfigured Vietnam vet finds his own niche within this diverse group. Wallace writes with poetic sensitivity as she delves into their lives and backstories, quickly engaging the reader in this close-knit community and the many secrets it harbors.--Donovan, Deborah Copyright 2016 Booklist

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

Set in the mid-1970s at an unnamed beach enclave, Wallace's (The Housekeeper) powerful novel centers on June, a young girl who is abandoned at a coastal motel with her infant child, Luke, and taken in by the motel's aging owner, Mabel. Following a cast of characters who are all emotionally hindered by the traumas of the past, the narrative switches perspectives chapter by chapter. Mabel, who is trying to move on after the death of her husband, is ready to close up the motel for the off-season when June's plight changes her plans. Iris, Mabel's reclusive friend with dark secrets in her past, repays Mabel for a long-ago favor by sheltering June after the motel closes for the off-season. Duncan, Iris's lawyer, helps June settle in while also trying to maintain the tenuous relationship between Iris and her estranged daughter, Claire. Sam, a disfigured Vietnam vet who has abandoned his prewar life, takes up Claire's offer to drive her from New York back to her childhood home. Though it is a dim journey for most of the characters, the book focuses on the resiliency of the human spirit. Wallace makes use of long, unconfined sentences to build the many distinctive voices and has a knack for teasing out important details. This is a quiet, contemplative novel that builds slowly and leaves a lasting impact. Agent: Claudia Cross, Folio Literary Management. (Jan.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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

When teenager June and her infant son, Luke, are abandoned by June's boyfriend in a 1970s coastal New England town, they are adopted by the town's similarly wounded inhabitants. June's arrival becomes a catalyst for townsfolk Mabel, a grieving widow; Iris, a wealthy recluse; Oldman, a kindly World War II veteran; and Duncan, the town's lawyer, as well as visiting Vietnam veteran Sam-who escorts Iris's daughter, Claire, back home from New York-to open themselves to human connection and move on from their pasts. As emotional as the story is, it is to Wallace's (The Housekeeper) credit that it does not tip into melodrama. Each resident's story is shared in nearly dialog-free chapters reminiscent of short stories. Narrator Elise Arsenault's deliberate, cheery delivery is a good match for the tone of the novel. The book is broken up into tracks every five minutes, which aids bookmarking. VERDICT Recommended for book clubs and fans of character-driven fiction. Public libraries should strongly consider purchase.-Julie Judkins, Univ. of North Texas, Denton © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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

In Wallace's (The Housekeeper, 2006, etc.) tightly structured third novel, unspoken feelings and long-endured suffering give birth to love and acceptance among the residents of a New England town.Withdrawn mothers, surrogate daughters, and sympathetic men with scarred faces come in pairs in Wallace's latest novel, which has unusually visible authorial fingerprints all over it. Narrated by six voices in the years 1974 and 1977, the story connects a group of isolated individuals in a backwater port town. One character links them all: a young mother named June, who arrives with her baby, Luke, at Mabel's motel and is soon abandoned there by the child's father. June, whose wastrel mother has taught her that "desertion [is] a normal state of being," is saved by a human chain of compassion composed of Mabel herself; her rich-widow friend, Iris; a benevolent loner named Oldman; and Sam, a physically and psychically scarred Vietnam vet. The only figure uncommitted to June is Iris' estranged daughter, Claire, who also, in her time, experienced Oldman's loving aid. Wallace's heightened approach to her narrative is evident not just in its symmetries, but also in the extremes and absolutes she invokes. Iris' marriage contained a bizarre secret which led her, after her husband died, to withdraw utterly from the world. Oldman "would do everything, anything" for June because she is the double of a refugee he loved during World War II. For Sam, ruined and isolated after his war injuries, "not even his father had called him [son], no officer or nurse or doctorhad ever put a consoling hand on his shoulder." Delivered in short story-like chapters, packed with narration but almost devoid of dialogue, this mannered tale is written in prose that is both lovely and sometimes as self-conscious as the book's composition. Too much engineering tends to suck the life out of a sensitive salvation story. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

1974   Mabel knew before the girl came to speak with her what she'd say: that the man who hadn't so much as posed as the girl's husband hadn't returned and wasn't going to. She -- Mabel -- had surmised -- no, she later told Iris over the phone, correcting herself, not surmised but known  -- from the moment she first saw them that he'd already washed his hands of her. For when he got out of the car he disregarded the girl, left her to open the passenger-side door and manage to get to her feet, stand, with that sleeping infant in her arms. He didn't even glance behind him to check on her, just walked toward the office porch and left her to trail him.          Midweek, afternoon, off-season. The autumn air was damp, still, the sky undulate with silken cirrus under which Mabel had been hanging sheets on the lines between the office and the last of the cabins. Two of those were occupied, four yet to be cleaned and shuttered, three still ready for any comers. Any, Mabel told herself, but she was nothing if not discerning about whom to rent to and whom to turn away, she'd had years of trial and error; and if the girl hadn't had that baby in her arms despite not looking much older than a child herself, Mabel would have said Sorry, I'm closing up for the season . But there she was, trailing him as though shy of him as Mabel approached, wiping her hands on the bleach-stained smock she was wearing over her sweater and jeans. Good day, she greeted them, which made the girl stop and examine the ground at her feet as he responded by giving a nod in the direction of the office and saying, I take it that vacancy sign is good.          He followed Mabel in, the screendoor closing behind him so that the girl had to let herself through it. She didn't stand next to him but behind and off to one side, head bent over her child. Mabel took in her stooped posture, the bluish half-moons under her eyes, the flush that rose to her cheeks when he told Mabel that he expected she might lower the price of a cabin if they stayed a while. How long's a while? Mabel asked. Ten days, he replied, which made the girl look sharply at him, then glance away quickly and hunch even lower over the cache in her arms, Mabel catching in the girl's expression what she thought might be consternation or dismay -- or, she later considered, fear, as if the girl thought he had eyes in the back of his head and would be able to see her consternation or dismay or fear, shielding herself from what Mabel already realized the girl could not. At that instant, she -- Mabel -- knew she would not, for the girl's sake, refuse them a cabin or a lower price, and so gave them both.          He reached into a front pocket and peeled off from a roll of bills the cash he placed on the counter, the girl now watching slantwise and in amazement because, Mabel figured, she hadn't known he'd had that roll on him or hadn't ever seen that much money, or both. Mabel said the keys would be to the cabin called Spindrift -- each cabin had a wooden sign with its name carved into it, hanging above the doorframe -- and added that it was the furthermost from the road and the quietest, so nothing should disturb them there. He sleeps good, the girl murmured then, shifting her weight from one foot to the other and looking at the man beseechingly as if, Mabel later told Iris, giving him the chance to admit the infant not only existed but wasn't any bother. He turned and glared speechlessly at the girl for a moment, returned to glare at Mabel, his eyes as bloodshot and dry and glassy as Mabel's husband's used to be after driving the rig with Jimmy Devine, hauling loads around the country for weeks on coffee and bennies and willful stubbornness and the occasional catnap taken in the bunk he and Devine had built into the cab to allow one of them to sleep while the other was behind the wheel. Mabel took in that glare and watched him work at blinking it away. She recognized exhaustion when she saw it, and she knew by those eyes, by the way his unwashed clothes hung on him and the way he smelled, that he'd been driving day and night, night and day, and that he'd simply given out on her doorstep. My luck were the words that went through Mabel's mind just then: it was only happenstance that they'd ended up at the cabins, that he'd come to the point of needing a good deal of rest before he could get behind the wheel of that dusty, dented old Buick and face a round of endless driving once again. It went without saying, to Mabel's way of thinking, that when the time came and he was ready, he aimed to drive off alone.          So, we're square, he said, nodding at the cash on the counter, putting his hand out for the keys. We are, Mabel returned, but I'll need some ID for my records and your receipt. I don't need -- he began to protest, but Mabel cut him off with: It's the way I do business, on the level. He eyed the bills she hadn't touched, and Mabel told Iris later that if he hadn't looked like he'd fall over from exhaustion any minute, he would probably have just scooped up what he'd put down and told her to go to hell. Instead, he turned on his heel and pushed past the girl, letting the screendoor slam behind him. That woke the infant, the girl saying Oh I'm sorry as the baby burst into whine and cry, then slipping away, letting the door shut gently behind her and standing on the porch rocking and cooing at the infant, her thinness so silhouetted by the screendoor through which Mabel gazed that she found it distressing. As disturbing was the way the man spoke to her when he approached, then watched her do as he said and waited for her to make her way over to the Buick and slide herself in.          The license he handed Mabel was from a Far West state. He was at least three inches taller than the height stated on it, and his eyes weren't hazel. Mabel wrote the name on the license into her registration book and filled out a receipt, telling him as she did what he needed to know. That the stove was electric. That the refrigerator was on. That there was a new showerhead, extra blankets in the closet. Not to use the towels for the beach. That they were responsible for making up the cabin -- if they chose to make it up at all. On their fifth day, she'd bring them fresh towels and sheets and collect the used ones. The television got two channels clearly, a few more if you played around with the rabbit ears. The public telephone was located on the outside of the office to their right. Roland was the night manager, the office closed at 11 p.m.; she, Mabel, reopened it at eight in the morning. There were directions in the cabin to nearby grocery shopping and beachgoing. And she knew he wasn't even half listening, standing there in a lank way and breaking out in a filmy sweat, vacantly watching her handle that license. When she handed it back to him with a receipt and the keys, she asked if he wanted a crib. Crib? he repeated. For the baby, she said. Nah, came his response.          Well, if you change your mind --           I won't, he told her. And left abruptly, again letting the screendoor slam, the violence in his stride so visible that the girl hurriedly swung her legs -- she'd been sitting with the passenger door open, her feet resting on the ground -- into the car and shut the door before he could reach her. For he wasn't the type, Mabel knew, to open or hold or close a door for that girl, and that wasn't because he'd gone with no or too little sleep while putting towns, cities, counties, states, most likely an entire continent between where they began from and where Mabel was standing. Knew, too, that he wouldn't come back into the office to ask for anything, and certainly not that crib, which was something the girl and infant had most likely so far done without anyway. And knew, too, that he'd keep that girl cowed on a tight rein, because nothing was going to change, at least not on his watch during this stopover: and even if he didn't consider himself as being on watch, this was the way Mabel saw it. Excerpted from The Girl in the Garden by Melanie Wallace 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.