What is your favorite flower?
The Heirloom Garden by Viola Shipman was the March
selection for the Page-turners Book Club at the Kewaunee Public Library. I enjoyed reading this novel at the beginning
of the month and it started me thinking of spring and my garden.
Abby Peterson has moved to Grand Haven, Michigan in
2003 with her young daughter Lily, and husband Cory. Cory has just returned from the war in Iraq
and is struggling with PTSD. Abby is
hoping for a new start in their rented home and has a new job as an engineer at
a nautical paint manufacturer. As the
family works to build their lives back, they meet their old neighbor Iris. Iris lives next door and has a beautiful
garden that is walled off by a high fence.
She has been alone for a long time after losing her husband in World War
II and her daughter to an illness afterwards.
She was a botanist who worked on propagating her own flowers including
daylilies. After she is befriended by
Lily, will she be able to come out of her shell?
I loved this story.
It was beautiful and brought tears to my eyes. I loved the structure of the novel that was
in sections named after different flowers as they bloom through the year. I loved that the story was narrated both by
Abby and by Iris. The story was in 2003
and also flashed back to World War II and after to tell Iris’s story. I loved that it showed that you may make assumptions
about a crabby old neighbor, but that they may have a story that is much
deeper.
As a female engineer, I also loved how Abby’s travails
at work was written. It was so very
relatable, especially being the only female engineer at the table. It’s like Viola Shipman had been to work with
me early in my career. I enjoyed that
the author had Abby be a female engineer and Viola a botanist. It was great to see science careers in a
novel!
This book made me really want to visit Grand
Haven. As a kid, we always went to South
Haven and Holland to the beach, but never Grand Haven. I grew up in Michigan, but now live in a
small town in Wisconsin on Lake Michigan.
I love flowers and growing them in my own yard. I have a lot of favorites, but I love Irises
and I love peonies. I have a peony from
my Great Grandma Kile that I enjoy seeing bloom each year. I just planted one last fall from my Grandma Arlt,
and I can’t wait for it to bloom.
Favorite Quotes:
“What I know is that war, sadly, is sometimes
necessary not simply to protect a people but to save the world from evil. But too often war is used as a way to keep
people in fear and, thus, in line. It is
a false symbol of safety.”
“On the highway, Cory grabs my hand and holds it until
we pull in the driveway, me thinking of trillium the entire way, of how we are
all just like them, so fragile, so in need of protection, but also, always, a
harbinger of hope.”
Overall, The Heirloom Garden by Viola Shipman was a
beautiful story full of family, hope, and gardens. This was my first Viola Shipman novel, and it
won’t be my last!
Book Source:
Kewaunee Public Library
I like the story, plus the cover is certainly very inviting. Thanks for the review.
ReplyDeleteThank-you!
DeleteI love that cover!
ReplyDeleteIt is a beautiful cover and a beautiful book. My book club loved it!
DeleteThis was my first Viola Shipman book and I have read and loved several now!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing with the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge.
I need to read more of her books!
Delete