I've been looking forward to reading this book ever since I first heard of it. I wasn't disappointed. Far from it. I was captivated from beginning to end and devoured it in three days. I highly recommend it for several reasons.
First there was McPhail's careful and thorough research into the details of the everyday lives of the people who lived on a slave-holding farm in pre- through post-Civil War in Greensboro, Mississippi. I craved the early morning biscuits made by Ginny, the housekeeper/slave who was a strong surrogate mother, wise counselor, and treasured friend to Emily, the Abolitionist's daughter. I wanted to share the feast where Ginny served a "slow-cooked stew of beef and onions; green tomato pie with potato crust, minus the called-for lemon zest; layers of sliced turnips and potatoes baked with cheese: Indian bread: and rice pudding with molasses, flavored with a bit of brandy and the carefully hoarded nutmeg." I wanted to taste the violets and pansies dipped in sugar that the children savored.
Another highlight was the author's heightened eye for beauty in ordinary things: the tangled limbs of a tree limned against a blue stained-glass sky that reminds Emily of a broken and repaired piece of pottery. A fragment of a quilt used as a potholder. A small blue feather left by a migrating bunting among the green clover and milkweed of an ungrazed pasture. It should come as no surprise that Diane McPhail is a gifted artist as well as writer.
I especially admired the author's deep psychological understanding of her realistic characters. There were so many in the first few chapters that I began listing them on a back page with brief descriptions for quick reference. Emily, with her forgotten childhood traumas that gave rise to unexplained anxieties, her sheltered innocence, her forthrightness and innate kindness. Ginny's resilience, strength of character, maternal compassion, and indomitable determination. Benjamin's pride in his work, respect for his owner, forgiving nature, and love for his son, Lucian. Dr. Charle's well-intentioned love for Emily combined with his cluelessness as to how to understand and relate to her. His playfulness and love for healing combined with his womanizing and greedy determination--triggered by his abusive alcoholic father and impoverished childhood--to make something of himself. These are not cardboard figures, but very human, complex, and real. Through it all we watch Emily's character develop from a fearful and vulnerable childishness to a self-accepting, grateful womanhood.
Finally, the pacing of the plot is very well-conceived. Like everyday life, it moves quickly and seamlessly from tender domestic scenes to images of unspeakable tragedy. From dramatic events and powerful emotions like love, envy, greed, and hatred, to the inescapably depressive aftermath of trauma and the necessary time for recovery. This realistic development of McPhail's theme of human prejudice, greed, and resilience, combined with her graceful writing--which manages to convey a maximum of information and meaning with a minimum of carefully-chosen words--is a major strength of this, a first novel that contains a delicious basketful of strengths!