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Product Details
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The Lost Garden is written in a style very much informed by Gwen's favourite writer, Virginia Woolf, who herself has just gone missing as the novel begins. Although some dialogue teeters on the edge between lyrical and overripe, the action builds to a lovely finale that merges all of the novel's disparate elements into something with genuine emotional resonance. Like the roses that fascinate the novel's heroine, The Lost Garden's poise and beauty are complemented by its surprisingly hardy nature. --Jason Anderson --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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Most helpful customer reviews
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Most Unusual Love Story,
By maureen beckstette (Tecumseh, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Lost Garden (Hardcover)
The setting for this book is wartime Britain - not the blitz on London but a country estate in the Devon countryside, where a group of Canadian soldiers happen to be posted temporarily near a group of English girls who are learning to grow crops for the war effort. Everything about this book is unusual - its context, characters and incredibly sensitive development of the story. There are turns of phrase that will catch you completely off guard. It is funny, sad and delightful. It's as well that it's not a lengthy book, because, once you start it, you won't be able to put it down.
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Beautiful,
By
This review is from: The Lost Garden : A Novel (Hardcover)
Helen Humphreys' The Lost Garden is a beautiful little gem of a novel, a quick and wonderful read about one woman's perfect moment and time and how it quickly eluded her. Gwen Davis is a lonely woman in the early days of World War II in London when she volunteers to lead a group of women in a war-effort farming experiment on an abadoned estate in the British countryside. She is devastated to leave London, devastated by the war and yet her experiences away from London turn out to be the most rewarding of her life. She finally forms a meaningful friendship and begins to fall in love with one of the Canadian soldiers briefly stationed at the estate. Gwen reflects on the nature of love and happiness, both in her life and in the lives of those around her. This is an excellent, if short, rewarding novel. Enjoy.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Pure enchantment,
By
This review is from: Lost Garden (Paperback)
The Lost Garden is a love story with a few mysterious elements woven throughout the plot. The result is both charming and haunting. In 1941, Gwen Davis, a horticulturalist, leads a small group of young women in Britain's Women's Land Army on a potato growing venture at an old, yet magnificent estate far from the shattered streets of bomb ravaged London. Adjacent to Gwen and her girls are a group of Canadian soldiers waiting to be deployed to the front lines. Gwen is a plain, clumsy, awkward protagonist who lacks self-confidence. When she befriends Raley, a Canadian soldier, and Jane, a heart-broken young woman, Gwen learns that the ghosts of lost loves never really leave anyone untouched. The setting of this short novel is slightly gothic and quite romantic, while never minimizing the horrors of war. A wonderful book that is perfect for a rainy weekend read while cozy on your couch. [Amy MacDougall]
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