In
1926 the Evergreen Spa Hotel is a beautiful place for the wealthy to spend
leisurely vacations. Guests come not for a weekend but for weeks to months. By
2014 the hotel has sadly deterioriated and has not been open for decades.
Young
women are the dominant characters in Evergreen Falls.
In
1926 pretty Violet Armstrong, having lost her job in Sydney, manages to find
employment as a waitress at the hotel.
Flora
Honey-Church Black, the daughter in a wealthy New South Wales farm family, is there with her younger brother, Sam, and her fiancé,
Tony, and several of Tony’s friends.
Flora,
though committed to her fiancé, meets Dr. Will Dalloway:
Flora looked
towards the hotel, then back at Will. A beam of orange sun shot low through the
trees and hit him in the eyes, and he raised his hand to shield them. In the
sunlight, his eyes looked very green. Then the wind shifted the branches, and
the beam of sun was gone. But the image stayed with her, the amber light on his
face, his shining eyes.
In
2014 Lauren Beck arrives in Evergreen Falls to work as a waitress. She has left
a difficult family situation in Tasmania. Lauren's character is established in the
opening sentence introducing her:
If I’d had any
experience with men, if I wasn’t a thirty-year-old virgin working in my first
job, I might have known how to speak to Tomas Lindegaard without sounding like
a babbling fool.
Tomas
is a Danish architect working on returning the hotel to past glory.
Back
in 1926 Flora is struggling with Sam. He is caught up in an addiction to opium.
He spends much of his time smoking pipes of the drug. If Flora cannot find a
way to get Sam to stop their father is likely to cut them off from financial
support.
Violet,
needing to support her mother, is grateful to have a job. She has lost too many
jobs by not being serious about her work.
In
present day, having spent 15 years in a family crisis Lauren is finally
reaching out for independence. Having dared nothing in her life every action is
tentative. When Tomas leaves behind at the restaurant a key to a closed wing of
the hotel she is tempted to explore but hesitates having never taken a risk.
She
uses the key. After accidentally knocking over some old furnishings Lauren
lifts an early gramophone whose box has cracked and finds some hidden letters.
She is startled and intrigued that the letters are steamy love letters from
SHB.
Motivated
by the letters Lauren undertakes a modern day search to identify the lovers.
Returning
to 1926 we gradually learn the details of the passionate relationship that
inspired the letters. With the book having opened in 1926 with a body being
hidden near the Falls readers know there is tragedy as well as love to come in the
story.
Writing
about romantic suspense is not my strength. Last year I even wrote about my prejudices with the sub-genre. 2015 is the 3rd year in a row I have read a work of romantic suspense. I have decided, in a change from last year's opinion, that I will read a work of romantic suspense once in awhile and do my best to appreciate them.
I found the women in Evergreen Falls interesting. Each of the trio is trying to find their way in life and love. They want a committed loving relationship yet they neither want to be calculating nor reckless in love.
I found the women in Evergreen Falls interesting. Each of the trio is trying to find their way in life and love. They want a committed loving relationship yet they neither want to be calculating nor reckless in love.
I
was surprised late in the book. I thought I knew how the story would unfold and I was
wrong.
I
was even more startled when a winter storm had an important role. I do not associate
major snowstorms with Australia.
I
enjoyed Lauren’s story more because it was the unraveling of a mystery. What
happened with Violet and Flora involved doomed love affairs. I am
confident readers who enjoy romantic suspense will enjoy Evergreen Falls. (Oct. 4/15)
The setting for this novel really appeals to me, Bill. Like you, I don't typically read romantic suspense, so I am not the best judge of it. Still, the context for this one is interesting. And I do like the past/present connection. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteMargot: Thanks for the comment. I would be interested to see you spotlight a work of romantic suspense.
ReplyDeleteI admire your perseverance Bill - I'm not much of a one for this sub-genre either though I do try to give them a go sometimes - I would like the setting for this one as I lived in the Blue Mountains for a couple of years though nowhere near as grand-sounding as the setting here - it's a gorgeous part of the country and yes it can be subject to fierce winters/snow storms (it's a much shorter season than in your neck of the woods though and you can go for several winters without seeing snow at all)
ReplyDeleteBernadette: Thanks for the encouragement. I visited the Blue Mountains when we were in Australia in 2010. It is beautiful country.
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