She thought that her family was an open book, without secrets. Even as a child, Barbara Jean Ellington knew her grandmothers were lesbians, a truth they never concealed. During BJ's summer vacations at their home on Blue Lake, Nonna and Lena taught her to swim and play cards, provided a lively contrast to BJ's conservative parents, and comforted BJ when her first summer romance ended abruptly and without reason. Now, years later, BJ seeks refuge in her late grandmothers' house in the wake of her husband's affair. As she relives the languid summer days of her youth and prepares the house for sale, she struggles to come to terms not only with the looming threat of divorce, but also with the Pandora's Box of family revelations she uncovers in Nonna's hidden notebooks. In them, she discovers a fifty-year family history littered with secrets from the past--secrets that have present day consequences for herself, her marriage, and for Travis, the boy who broke her heart during that long-ago summer.
With discerning prose and compelling characters, SUMMERS AT BLUE LAKE follows in the tradition of bestselling authors such as Anita Shreve, Elizabeth Berg, and Sue Miller.
Summers at Blue Lake bounces back and forth between the present (approximately now) and various points in the childhood and youth of Our Protagonist, Bobbi, or BJ as she was sometimes called. Most important are the summers she spent with her grandmothers, a loving lesbian couple. In the present Bobbi has just gone through a painful divorce with a cheating husband. She arrives to take possession of her late grandma Anja's house. During one summer she reconnects with old friends and learns things about her family that help her to view her current problems in a new light.
There's some melodrama here and sometimes the story loses focus, but overall a good read. I actually liked the stories of Bobbi's childhood better and her grandmas' lives than her struggles to adjust to the divorce. My favorite line in the book reads something like, "When I wrote in a school essay that on my father's side of the family we were Scots-Irish, on my mother's side we were Lesbian, I didn't understand why the teacher sent me to the school nurse's office while they called my parents."
The storyline was original. It kept my interest and was a good summer read. I'm not sure what some reviewers hated about the ending. I thought it wrapped up nicely.
I found myself a bit frustrated with the main character of the book. One of her grandmothers had died (she had two grandmas due to their lesbian relationship), and she come back to the house she spent summers at when she was a child. IT seemed to me she didn't have much character...she kept flipping back and forth between her soon to be ex-husband (who was cheating on her and had a pregnant girlfriend), and her teenage crush. It seemed she didn't have much in the way of backbone. The story flips back and forth between 2000 and the year she was 14 when a family feud occurred that split her and her then boyfriend. I don't know, she just seemed kind of shallow. she finds her grandmas diary and finds the truth behind the feud. At the end she flips back and forth with who she's going to be with, the now sorry ex or the lover. Not a bad book, but not a great book either.
A relatively interesting story, told in a not terribly coherent way. I liked the main character, and enjoyed reading about her craft. However, I just don't see the point of the way the book was structured, the conversation was not very conversational, the little boy acted both older and younger than his supposed age, and the many copyediting errors all detracted significantly from my enjoyment of this book. Ah, the hazards of picking something randomly off the new-book shelf in the library.
This book took entirely too long to get the point. The main character was supposed to find an unsent letter from her grandmother to her mother that would reveal family secrets. This letter wasn't even mentioned until almost 200 pages into the book. Once she started reading the letter I could tell where it was going...and I was right. I did not enjoy this book.
A Novel of family secrets...it states on the cover.The book was 315 pgs. long and the story could have been told in half that many pages. But it is this author's 1st book so she might get better. I read the whole thing because I wanted to find out how the story ended but I wouldn't recommend the book. It just doesn't have any sparks.
This book was WAY too long. The story was really dragged out. I also wasn't a big fan of the writing style. I kept reading because I wanted to know how it ended, but I just didn't enjoy the journey very much.
This was an ok read. Not terrible, but not great literature. I really enjoyed the first part where she flipped back and forth between her teenage years and the present. I didn't really enjoy the second part at all. It didn't seem to fit the storyline.
I am someone who has to finish every book I start. I tried and tried with this book, but eventually had to give up. I don't know how it ends and I'm fine with that. I was at no point drawn in to the plot.
I couldn't decide who to go with at the end. I like when a story that could be anyone's story and somewhat predictable still has a bit of a cliffhanger ending. Relatable characters. Kept a steady pace. I enjoyed it.
I've been reading this book for a couple of weeks while walking on the treadmill and it slowly began to grow on me until I was sad to see it ending. The story is interesting and different enough to make it good. The writing was good, but it was missing that little flare to make it great.
Story is a bit twisted. And it took the author two thirds of the book to get to the gist of the book. The letters should have been found long before page 200 when the whole book is only 285 pages. U spend the first 200 pages wondering when something is going to start happening.
With a poetic style, this is the story of a flawed woman who is discovering herself and the truths of her family. It speaks to specific time periods and times of life for women, relationships, and how women make and deal with their choices. I'll be looking for more by Jill Althouse-Wood.
I mean, it is what it is. Nice with the originality of the lesbian couple backstory (though I predicted the entire secret even before it was an obvious secret), and it's also frustrating that this aspect is so often the backstory.
In the writing, there are original phrases and those that are ones that you've read a mazillion times before. And there's just not really a spark in any of the romantic stories from which the fundamental relationships are supposed to have been built.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
The story had the same elements as many books. The cheating husband, the pregnant girlfriend, new beginnings with an old love interest, but there was enough of a different backstory to keep the reader engaged.
Beginning was okay. Characters unoriginal and not particularly likeable. It was written kind of awkwardly as well. I think the incest definitely ruined this book for me.
This story had me engrossed in it, and waiting to see what the secrets were. As far as the writing and plot I would give it 4 stars. However, I have to say that once the secret was revealed, the difference it made in the main characters relationship, and the blithe way they both decided to ignore it, and continue on was sickening to me. In my personal opinion, the author was saying incest is ok, as long as you are in love with each other. I don't agree.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Interesting subject, a long term relationship -50 years together- between two grandmothers, a perspective through the eyes of hers granddaughter, who is going through a painful divorce. It's not great literature, but with the back and fourth between the past and the present kept me interested until the end, even though I'm not 100% happy with the plot.
The book was good. The storyline was different from otherbooks I have read and was not sure how fluid it would be. I liked the flashback chapters and present day. Jill Althouse Wood does a great job of describing the relationship between the grandaughter and her two grandmothers. At times I wished for more details but in the end it came together well.
This book started off great but it was ruined by the incest! I can't wrap my head around that or the fact that it wasn't mentioned in the reviews. I only kept reading hoping they weren't in fact related but no they were cousins, first cousins by blood hooking up, falling in love, and ignoring the blood they share.