The Summer Girls by Mary Alice Monroe
My 2 Cents:
It's not too late! Even
though Labor Day Weekend's passed, and school's back in, temperatures
are still climbing past 90 during the day, and the calendar says it's
still officially summer until September 23. Indian Summer is what my
grandmother used to call it.
So I got my hands on the
audio book of Mary Alice Monroe's new book, The
Summer Girls,
which hit shelves just in time for beachgoers and vacationers this
summer. And, let me tell you, MAM has really hit her stride. I became
a fan of Monroe's fiction with Swimming
Lessons and The
Beach House, having
spent time in and around the Isle of Palms. But, The
Summer Girls, set
on Sullivan's Island in South Carolina's Lowcountry, is, I believe,
her best novel, yet.
34-year-old
Carson Muir leaves L.A., broke and jobless, to spend the summer with
the grandmother who raised her, Marietta Muir, who's celebrating her
80th
birthday, at Sea Breeze, their beloved Sullivan's Island home.
Joining Carson at “Mamaw's” are her two half-sisters, Harper and
Dora. Harper is 28, an assistant to her high-powered, magazine editor
mother in New York City. Dora (for Eudora Welty – all three girls are
named after literary giants) is a stay-at-home mother and
home-schools her autistic 9-year-old son, Nate. In the middle of an
unpleasant divorce, Dora finds herself staying at Sea Breeze while
her home in nearby Summerville undergoes renovation before it goes on
the market for sale.
Throw in a near-death-experience with a shark (Carson),
and a friendly dolphin named Delphine, alcohol, secrets from the past
revealed, and you have the makings of a life-changing summer. For all
three women.
Monroe's writing is deft, funny, heartwrenchingly
honest, and enlightening – about dolphins and their plight along
the Atlantic coast, about family relationships, about autism … and
the Lowcounty meals her characters eat will leave your mouth
watering.
I'm
just glad The Summer Girls is
the first book of three in The Lowcountry Summer Trilogy, because I can hardly wait to see what happens next. And, meantime,
it's fun to guess. (Write fast, Mary Alice).
Length:
10 CDs, Unabridged.
Worth
Your Time?
Yes. I literally groaned when a disc ended.
Bonus:
Read
by the author.
Thank you for this beautiful review! I'm working on book two and it will be out in summer 2014! I'll send you a copy. MAM
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like it'll be next on my reading list -- plus I love a good audio book. Thanks for the review!
ReplyDelete