Publisher - Grand Central Publishing
Publish Date - February 2013
Genre - Southern Fiction
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My Rating:
If you read my previous post on Roses, then I think you know
what you are in for with this novel. I LOVE Southern Fiction. There is
something about the grand, family dramas and the very specific world that
Southern novels generate that just transports you through time and space and
makes you feel happy. Good Southern novels should make your couch feel like a
front porch swing with the sun on your face, wildflowers in the distance, crickets
chirping and a cold glass of sweet tea on the table next to you. Feels good,
right!?
It’s hard to create this feeling through writing and only
the best of the best can do it. *cough* Margaret Mitchell *cough*.
Tumbleweeds is another epic Southern family tale that
transports you through time. It tells the tale of Cathy Benson who is orphaned
at the age of 11 and forced to uproot her California lifestyle to go live with
her grandmother in a small town in the Texas Panhandle. Cathy’s grandmother,
Emma, was not close with her son and his wife and is hesitant to take on the
role of Cathy’s guardian. Their relationship starts off rocky but they
eventually find common ground in their grief.
Like most towns in
Texas, football is life. Cathy meets John and Trey Don who are also both
orphans and (after some initial coaxing) they take her under their wing. Of
course, this all results in a complicated love triangle with tons of twists and
turns that determine the fate of all three of them. The story takes you through
their years growing up in Kersey, graduation, and into their adult lives until
their eventual reunion at the age of forty back in Kersey, Texas.
Let me start off by saying that I did not love Tumbleweeds
as much as I loved Roses. While the characters in Tumbleweeds were dynamic and
interesting, the plot was not so much. It started off captivating much like
Roses but lost some of its gusto as the story went on. Many of the twists and
turns, while unexpected, were a bit too unbelievable. The way that the story
all wrapped up in the end was too neat and perfect for my taste. Certain points
in the story that should have been truly dramatic turning points were glossed
over and some that didn’t seem so important dragged out for too long.
I think that if I had read this novel before Roses, I would
not have been as disappointed. But, since Roses captivated me in a way that a
book hadn’t in a long time, my expectations were high. Unfortunately,
Tumbleweeds fell short of meeting that bar.
Pair This With: Hunt's Vineyard Rose
This is one of my favorite local VA wines and it pairs perfectly with this novel. It's light, crisp and easy to drink but not too sweet. A perfect hot summer day sipping wine!