See Paula's review for the plot. More than I wanted to know about vineyards or a hurricane that missed. A nearly 500-page love story between Olivia and Simon.
We have Natalie, the matriarch, whose children have been living their own lives for most of her 70+ years. Her outgoing, (did he have any other qualities?) husband has just died. We have Carl, who works at Asquonset, whom Natalie has loved for 60+ years, and has decided to marry six months after her husband became deceased. We have her three children who disapprove, and we have Olivia and little Tess. Oh, and we have Simon, who is focused on the vineyard (his wife, mother and son died in a boating accident) and is Carl's son.
Thru judicious reveals, we learn Natalie's story, told by way of her writing a book which she dictates to Olivia. Simon warms to Olivia, slooowwly, and the children (and some of the grandchildren) warm to Natalie, although she is focused, as always, on Asquonset. Very little is said about Carl or Alexander's personalities, and Natalie has a secret about an earlier son she is loath to tell.
Natalie's stories about Alexander and Carl during WW II provide some interest for me. But I found it difficult to believe that Simon, himself, physically goes out & tears the leaves away from the grapes not in the sunshine; what times of day were they in shade? Well, there was someone named Donna who helped, I suppose. Nice handling of Tess, and her artistry; it was interesting that she seemed interested in the winemaking process.
When do you get over a death? Carl says: "It's different with different people. Like a cold. Some people shake it in two days. Some sniffle for a week. All you know is that at some point you start to feel better. You breathe freer. You sleep the night. You start wanting to do things." Hmm. I have a friend who's still going thru grief after five years.
Natalie says to Olivla: "You wanted to be a part of a family. Well, this is what family is about. It's about crossed wires and lack of communication. It's about making accommodations for things you would never allow in a friend. With a friend, you just say good-bye and that's it. With family, you're stuck." But what about a family member who is an addict? Or a close friend?
Too simplistic for me.