Twenty Two year old Sophie moves to the Oregon coastal town of Cannon Beach in 1917 to keep house in the beach cabin of her two brothers while they work building the roads. Her life changes from simple to complicated as falls in love with a man she thinks is unavailable.
I bought this from the author at a local book fair and admit to low expectations. But this is a fine little novel, a tale of a strong woman and her difficult choices. The setting is mostly the Oregon coast and the time period fluctuates between the twenties/thirties and "present time." It's told in two voices--Aunt Sophie and her niece's. Sophie's language has an authentic roughness, with word choices and cadences familiar from my grandmothers' voices. The punctuation anomalies, intended or otherwise, add to that voice. I found the storyline convincing--unusual but not improbable--and the characters appealing and believable.
Sophie leads a life of isolation and hard work, with only her ignorant brothers for company. When she's drawn to an attractive man, his wife is less of an obstacle to love than Sophie expected. When she finds she's pregnant, her life becomes complicated in ways she could never imagine--complicated and unconventional, but far less bleak, at least for awhile.
Threads was interesting. . . I was smug and did some skimming ready having a clear idea where this sleepy story was going. And then it took a turn I couldn't have predicted if I tried. . .and I tried! At the tale's end it got me. . . Danged if it wasn't just as weird as family life is with all those absolutely true improbability sitting pretty in the family tree. I expected to wall away smug and self-satisfied at being right. I was not right. . .it was dear, and real, and I'm going to find her next book.
Interesting story, lots of quilting references (which was why I bought it.) The relationships were rather bothersome to my way of thinking.
The writing left something to be desired as well. I often found myself re-reading paragraphs in order to make sense of what the author was trying to say. I may be mistaken but I'd swear that the brother named Zack was referred to as Zeke at one point.
I will probably not bother to read the rest of the series.
Tried it on two devices and it will not scroll through the pages. Cannot find how to return it to Amazon.
However did manage to skip past the chapter endings the kept bumping me out if the book. It is not a bad read but hardly worth the effort to deal with the technical difficulties.
A unique setting on the Oregon Coast in a time at the turn of the century nearly forgotten. The story is populated by accessible characters who are faced with provocative choices who make unorthodox decisions. A sensual historical novel with an unpredictable and engaging storyline.