By 1838, the Goodenoughs have spent years living amid the muddy wetlands of northwestern Ohio, growing fruit trees as a requirement of their settlement – but not everyone blooms where they’re planted.
For the father, James, apples are sustenance, a delicious reward, a symbol of prosperity, and justification for his family’s continued stay in an inhospitable land. For his neglected wife, Sadie, they’re a hateful obstacle to returning home, and also, through her love for strong applejack, they provide a means of escape. The arduousness of frontier life, which Sadie detests, is illustrated in meticulous detail. The Goodenoughs have lost half their children to fever; the remaining five get embroiled in their parents’ spiteful feud. Their orchard becomes a battleground.
Part Two introduces an unsettling mystery: what drives nine-year-old Robert, the youngest son, to flee his home? Out in California in the 1850s as an adult, following rumors of a grove of giant sequoias, he stumbles into a job working for an eccentric Cornish plant collector. He actively avoids long-term commitments, women included, but later finds his past has followed him there.
Historical figures like John Chapman, aka Johnny Appleseed, are woven credibly into the story. Both Ohio’s Great Swamp and the American frontier itself are long gone, but the novel recaptures these settings through its elegantly written, emotion-filled narrative. One of Chevalier’s strongest novels, it will also leave you pondering the awe-inspiring splendor of nature and people’s connections to it.
This is a preview of a soon-to-be-published title: At the Edge of the Orchard will be published by Viking on March 15th in hardcover ($26.95or C$34.95, 285pp). The UK edition, from The Borough Press, appears on March 10th (£16.99, hb, 304pp). This review first appeared in the Historical Novels Review's February issue.
I've never been disappointed by Chevalier - she has a nice touch.
ReplyDeleteI haven't read them all yet, but Pearl Earring has been my favorite.
DeleteI haven't read Chevalier in so long. I must revisit her!
ReplyDeleteHope you'll enjoy this one too.
DeleteI've been meaning to read a Tracy Chevalier but never got around to it. I stand a better chance of doing so as At the Edge of the Orchard is in my TBR pile
ReplyDeleteI'll be interested to hear what you think about it. I like how she's been able to capture many different settings.
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