Famous in a Small Town by Viola Shipman

Robin’s Rave Reviews 2023

 

Step into nostalgic comfort in Good Hart, Michigan with FAMOUS IN A SMALL TOWN by Viola Shipman. Your summer pace will slow as you relax by the shores of Lake Michigan with BFFs Becky and Q. When you tire of the lake, take a drive through the picturesque Tunnel of Trees. Then head to the Very Cherry General Store to send a postcard. Or better yet, pick up a bakery goody or a sandwich . While there, say hello to Mary, the feisty octogenarian owner. And you don’t want to miss the annual Cherry Festival and Cherry Pit Spittin’ Championship. Did I mention Mary won when she was 15, back when women had never entered such an unladylike activity? In these parts she’s known as Cherry Mary, and no one has broken her record since 1958. Up for a try?

Summary

Cherry Mary is the third-generation woman to own the general store, but she doesn’t have a daughter to pass it down to. Her son and grandson aren’t particularly interested, either. But Cherry Mary still holds onto a prediction given to her in childhood – that another woman is destined to join the female line of store owners. Mary repeatedly sees a vision of four women in the distance walking toward her over the lake, reinforcing the prediction. Or is it simply a mirage? Mary was told it will take a lifetime to be fulfilled.

Becky just turned 40, the same day her long-time relationship crashed and burned. She feels unfulfilled in life after always making safe choices. Becky and her friend Q go on a Michigan vacation reminiscent of childhood summers with Becky’s grandparents. Becky sees herself fitting in at this lakeshore community. Just as Cherry Mary takes her under her wing, Mary’s grandson Ollie shows up. He’s changed his mind about the quirky town and old-fashioned general store, and he feels threatened by Becky.  He wants to protect his grandmother from this stranger “taking advantage” of her.

FAMOUS IN A SMALL TOWN is about love, friendship, family (by blood and by choice), destiny, and the choices we make. It’s a story with heart and soul. Be prepared. You’ll want to book a trip to Michigan after you read it!

 

I only review books I would give a 4 or 5 star rating, for well-written, enjoyable books I would recommend. Just keep in mind, if it doesn’t sound like your cup of tea from the description, then move on to my next book review. Perhaps this book is too slow paced for you, but that’s part of its charm. The author does a fabulous job conveying a small lake town struggling to keep life simple in a crazy world. The slow-paced summer days, the quirky people in the community, the general store as the hub of community life, the small-town festival – it’s cherry pie Americana at its best.

Interesting fact

Viola Shipman is a pen-name. The books are written by Wade Rouse, but he writes under his grandmother’s name as a way to honor her.  He writes stories that take place in Michigan, his home state. I had the joy of meeting Wade at an author event back in June through the Cuyahoga County Public Library’s Beyond the Book Jacket Speaker Series.

Check out review I did a few years back on another Viola Shipman book, The Heirloom Garden.

 

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@author.robin.shelley

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The Heirloom Garden and Girls of Summer

Hi all! Hope you’ve been finding creative and enjoyable ways to spend your summer. It’s definitely different with social distancing, mask wearing, and activities cancelled, and yet there is so much to be thankful for. Enjoy family. Enjoy nature. Enjoy a good book. Speaking of good books . . . .

Did you like how I transitioned right there? I’ve read two good books since  my last blog and wanted to share about them in case you’re looking for something new to read.

The Heirloom Garden by Viola Shipman was so good. I loved the story of Iris who is a recluse in Grand Haven, Michigan. She lost her husband in WWII and then her only child at a young age. After Iris is misunderstood by the townspeople during another unsettled time, this botanist puts up a ten foot fence to block everyone out of her life.  She finds joy only in her gardening.  Iris hybridizes daylilies as well as masters growing a variety of other flowers in her garden. She also owns the house next door and rents it out to a new family. Cory, the father, is struggling with PTSD after serving in the Iraq War. Abby, hIs wife, and Lily, his daughter, are negatively affected by his disconnect to life at home. Gradually Cory connects with Iris since her husband died fighting in the military, but it bothers him that she never got closure since her husband’s body was never brought home. Iris connects with the couple’s daughter because Lily brings love and joy into Iris’s life that she’s been missing since the death of her daughter. Iris and the new family next door help each other heal.

The best way to describe The Heirloom Garden is as a lovely story. The author is able to balance difficult  topics so that they never become too heavy to interfere with the sweetness of the storyline. I truly enjoyed the story.

 

I also recently enjoyed reading Girls of Summer by Nancy Thayer. Although I felt the first few chapters delayed the real story from starting, I really liked this book. Lisa is a divorced middle aged woman with two adult children, Juliet and Theo.  After raising the children alone and putting her own life on hold, Lisa finally discovers she has interest in a man in town. Just about the same time, her daughter comes home to Nantucket for the summer.  On the boat to the island, she meets a new guy she’s interested in. Then Lisa’s son comes home and starts up a relationship with a girl he liked back in high school. Privacy becomes an issue for everyone since no one knows when someone else might pop in at the house, especially when they want to bring dates home. Add the complication that the girl Theo wants to date is the daughter of mom’s new boyfriend and you get an interesting story. This was a good, light, beach read.

I have read some other books over the last few months, but not all of them were ones I would recommend. Instead of writing a bad review, I have chosen to simply not mention them. I like to keep things on the positive side. Besides, as an author myself, I know how difficult it is to write a novel so I don’t like to talk badly about someone else’s hard work. I’ll  just focus on books I liked and hope you find some enjoyable books mentioned in my blogs. When you need a break from life, escape into someone else’s world for a little while.

Happy reading!