I LOVED this book! It is a scrumptious slize of lemon drizzle escapism, with a glass of champagne to wash it all down. When Ellie returns to Willow Tree Farm with her pre - teen son, Josh, her life is in disarray. The last thing she expects from returning to her mother and her past is that it will make things better. All she's hoping for is a reprieve and to leave her cheating husband behind in America with his pregnant lover.
But, Willow Tree Farm is not the scuzzy dippy hippy commune that was seared onto Ellie's memory at age fourteen. It is now a well - run community farm that could have been plucked straight out of a Cath Kidston catalogue with a Farrow and Ball colour scheme and a side of The Good Life.
Her mother is still there and eager to mend bridges with Ellie who resists patching up their painful past, no matter how much it seems things have changed.
But, the charm of the farm and its colourful colony of inhabitants slowly charms Ellie into submission.
The only fly in the ointment is the six foot four hulking gorgeous brute of blue - collar steel. Art. The very epicentre of Ellie's worst humiliation all those years ago, before she fled the farm and her mother to live with her father. At fourteen she had a crush on Art the size of Big Ben, and he stamped on that crush and her heart with brutal force.
And it seems as if nothing has changed. Art is still gorgeous, but as remote, taciturn and moody as ever. This is in spite of Ellie's son Josh forming an instant and binding friendship with Art's daughter, Toto.
Ellie and Art dance around each other for weeks, their animosity barely cloaking their intense attraction for one another. But as the beautiful hazy languour of summer seeps into Ellie's bones, forcing her to take stock of her life and what she really wants, and as she gets to know Art as an adult and not the moody enigmatic teenager who she gave her heart to all those years ago, she gets a glimpse of an entirely new Art, and a new future...
The question is, can she and Art overcome the pain of the past to move on together? And what happens when Ellie's good-for-nothing husband turns up, insisting that he's a changed man?
Heidi Rice effortlessly depicts the idyllic kind of summer that we all have in our memory banks, or wish we'd experienced. Willow Tree Farm is a true elysian dream, but grounded in enough reality to make you believe that it just might exist. And that perhaps you could find it and live there...
The diary entries interspersed through the story from Ellie's fourteen-year-old self-are just enough to add context and poignancy to the story.
Read it and enjoy. I'm off to find some lemon drizzle cake and champagne!