Tuesday, May 11, 2021

Paint and Nectar - Ashley Clark

 



From christianbook.com:

"In 1929, a spark forms between talented watercolorist Eliza and William, a charming young man who has been hired to forge her popular paintings. Her aunt makes it clear Eliza should stay away from him because of a feud between their families over missing heirloom silver. But the source of the rivalry was long ago, and as the two get to know each other, they fall in love. William regrets the job that desperation led him to take and their families' ongoing bitterness, but setting things right comes at a cost.

In present-day Charleston, Lucy Legare has just inherited an old house from a mysterious benefactor, along with all the secrets it holds, including an old silver heirloom. Declan Pinckney is determined to buy the house for his family's development company. But as Lucy uncovers secrets about the house, garden, and silver, she becomes more determined than ever to preserve the historic Charleston property, not only for history's sake but also for her own."


"A movement that can be summed up in this - that redemption, like sunlight, always reaches through the gates, and that we, like flowers, bend toward what grows us.  So that the imitations and likenesses we have accepted as originals are exposed as deception, and we are left with the hope of a truer inheritance, a truer promise: a second garden, where all the dead things come alive and all that is forfeited is restored , and all that is fractured becomes a mosaic of color." (emphasis mine)

The redemption theme and generational legacy that carried throughout this book were deeply engaging and gripping.  Learning the "better" thing, the "better" choice, the "truer" purpose in life is an important lesson for not just the characters in this book, but for the reader as well.

There are many ties to the author's first book, The Dress Shop on King Street, and while it would have been a spoiler before reading them both, I feel like I needed a character chart to keep everyone's relationships straight.  

Regardless of the periodic confusion, I really enjoyed this book, and give it 4 stars.  I love Ms. Clark's writing style and she does a great job tying in the past to its consequences on the present.

You can find Paint and Nectar HERE.
You can find the author HERE.

I received a digital copy of this book from the publisher, via NetGalley, in exchange for my honest review.


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