A book about apples and family. Actually, one of the characters Is THE Johnny Appleseed, rowing down the river in a double canoe filled with apple seedlings and saplings and apple seeds for homesteaders to plant.
The Goodenough family has travelled from Connecticut to “The Black Swamp” in Ohio to make a life. James, the father, is the ultimate apple grower and worshipper. He treats his apples and trees better than his family. He is experienced in grafting, growing, and has a sixth sense with these trees. Unfortunately the soil is not rich in this part of Ohio and it’s filled with trees and roots and stumps and to make a friable soil to plant these trees and keep them alive and producing, is hard work. Mud, bogs, swamp fever, were part of the challenges of living there. It is an even bigger challenge to make these Apple trees grow and produce successfully out in this unknown area. The only family member who shares his Apple interest and is side by side learning with his father, is son, Robert. The other children (and wife) could really care less. Ironically, the wife grew up with a family orchard but didn’t give a damn about the trees or the apples yet she hooks up with an apple lover, James. Go figure.
We learn a lot about apples in this story. We find out what apples are “spitters” and what apples are eaters or used for cider/applejack. We read about how to graft a branch from an apple tree to the trunk of another apple tree. We also learn about swamp fever and how it easily took the lives of some of James and Sadie’s children, which possibly explains a part of why James loves his trees and Sadie hates them.
James’ wife Sadie is a mean spirited individual. She is rude and crass and jealous of James’ attention to the trees instead of to her. She is mean on purpose and truly awful when she gets her hands on applejack and gets sexually boisterous, although not with her husband, but flagrantly, with other men. Shes actually given her husband a black eye. She’s got a full on crush on the Apple man who visits with the trees and apple seeds in the canoe and right in front of her husband.
The rest of the family members are dysfunctional in their own way. We know that family members are all different in size, shape, personality, and these are no different. While this story is about their family life through the years, and apples are at the core (no pun intended) it becomes the story of Robert, the son, who shares the same passion as his father, for apples. Robert, the eventual lone survivor of the Goodenough clan.
Robert’s passion for apples becomes a passion for trees. And after the death of his parents, he leaves the homestead and his siblings and strikes out on his own. He is the son who will learn, travel, work a variety of jobs, make acquaintances, truly fall in love and in the end, settle in a most unexpected place with his own family.
There are references made in the book of the mining of gold out West - the Gold Rush.
Robert’s love for trees stays strong and stays with him in his future. He is, what is now called, a tree agent, collecting seedlings and seed pods of the great sequoia and redwood trees in California, shipping them overseas to The United Kingdom. I’ve not ever heard of this, but these huge trees have been successfully planted and are are growing there to this day.
It is interesting to read the Acknowledgements section at the back of the book; a lot of history and research was done to create this story. It is very interesting and quite informative. I enjoyed this book very much. Now I want to go and make some applesauce or bake an apple pie. I’ve got apples on the brain.