I’ve read a few Trisha Ashley books and I like how many of them link together by referring to past characters and situations. They’re invariably set in villages in the North West that you’d like to live in yourself and in a community you’d like to be a part of. This follows on from A Winter’s Tale, which I enjoyed very much and again some of the same characters are mentioned so it feels like you are reading the latest instalment of a serial.
Josie lives in Neatslake with her partner Ben. They’ve been together since her first day at the local school 25 years earlier, where she also met her best mate Libby. Josie found herself there through a tragedy back home in St Albans following the death of her parents in an accident, so this possibly explains her staying with Ben so long when it is apparent to all of us that the relationship is on the rocks. They live a sort of “Good Life” which suits her down to the ground, and it’s in marked contrast to that of Libby, who is twice widowed after marriages to much older, wealthy men but is now back in the village. Great pains are taken to point out that these were real love matches and not gold-digging marriages, and it is done well enough to be accepted. When Libby falls madly in love with Tim (which was a bit unrealistic I thought) who lives in the local Elizabethan pile, she and Josie join forces to set up a wedding reception business. Josie’s wacky wedding cakes and Libby’s organisational skills soon make for a very successful business and attract a wide range of characters.
So we follow Josie who talks to us as she would to a friend she was writing a letter to. We learn about her thoughts and feelings, insecurities and real emotions. We see that she can’t tell what is going on right under her nose because she’s either so wrapped up in her village life or is complacent, or a bit of both. But then when it all goes wrong, she’s forced into a different way of life and a different way of looking at love and romance.
I loved listening along whilst she made jams, pickles, cakes and told us all about them. And meeting the supporting cast – though some were a bit too far left of eccentric for me. There’s a comedy of errors contained in the story, suitors falling over themselves for Josie, and an inexplicable family mystery surrounding Libby that to me added nothing and would have been better left out.
I’ve read a few reviews of this book and some are rather scathing about the style of writing, but for me it’s a definite plus. As with a couple of other books by this author, they are written in a kind of blog or journal style. This leads to a lot of musings, thinking aloud and rather mundane thoughts by the narrator which aren’t for everyone, but really work for me. Probably because it feels realistic, whilst not being either great literature or thrill-a-minute. After all, that’s what most of our lives are really like, aren’t they, if we are being honest? Now does Josie show up in a later book? I need to find that out.
And thanks so much for including the recipe for peapod wine! Going to try that one!
4.5