Member Reviews
I really enjoyed this book. The descriptions of the scenery and the harshness of trying to live in Northern Alberta are so well written I could imagine the scenery and the condition of the house. Molly has a really hard year living in this harsh environment. She is helped by reading her great aunts diary and by some of the people she meets. This book has obviously been well researched and I would definitely recommend it.
What a fascinating and entertaining read!
If you really want to experience the early days of Canadian homesteads then this is a great book to start. You get to live and breathe each and every experience with the characters and it was a really interesting way to discover early Canadian history and to see just what difficulties people in those times had
The plot seemed quite straight forward and basic at first - the weather and conditions were not going to be easy for a modern day girl. But the author has written with such precision and passion that it becomes a journey of discovery and more. The whole environment is brought to life with the vibrancy and care of an artist’s paintbrush. The descriptions of the landscape are stunning - but it was the interaction between man, beast and the elements which really shone for me.
Oh and then there was the diary! - What a great way of getting the history to speak in the present - the words written by Molly’s great-aunt in 1924 c really adds another level of authenticity to the plot and the overall effect was like stepping back in time.
A great read for anyone interested in Canadian culture but also those who love a good challenge led story.
This book is one of those rare gems where the plot is predictable o it should be banal but it isn't. The drama should be expected but it isn't because the characters leap off the page. It hits all the required tropes and story beats for this type of woman's own mystery and yet it is told in a fresh engaging way. Despite my intrinsic dislike for epistolary and diary type narratives, I really enjoyed the dual time lines here and found they enhanced the experience and the story. Highly recommended.
Single mom, Molly Bannister, is down on her luck. Not only does she have a four-year-old daughter with emotional problems, Molly suddenly finds herself jobless. Just when her funds are about to run out, she discovers she’s an heiress. Of a dubious kind.
Molly’s great aunt in Canada has left her everything. But everything isn’t much—namely a remote, abandoned homestead in the wilds of northern Alberta. And it comes with a caveat. If Molly can survive the year there, it’s hers. She can sell off the land and have more than enough money to move back to her native Arizona and afford the treatment her daughter needs.
Living off the grid, without electricity or indoor plumbing, Molly must learn survival skills, much like the original settlers—cooking on a wood stove, pumping water from the well, and doing laundry by hand—all while amusing her child. When she discovers her great aunt’s diary, the book becomes a tale within a tale, the trials and triumphs of both women told in parallel—the homesteader of the past, helping Molly through her most difficult moments with good humor, resourcefulness and wisdom.
Author Elinor Florence displays great empathy for her characters and a passion for the subject of homesteading. The book is filled with vivid descriptions and a practical history of early pioneers—all brought to life with a charming narration. There are many amusing bits, mostly supplied by Molly’s precocious daughter, and edge-of-your-seat moments, as Molly and her child brave wild animals and the severe cold of northern Alberta. There’s even a budding romance.
All in all, it’s a beautifully written story, well-researched and engaging.
I received a free e-copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
Molly, a single Mom, had just lost her job and was desperate for money to provide therapy for her 4 year old daughter. Out of the blue came a phone call from a lawyer stating her great aunt had left her her house and acres of land in Northern Canada, but with one condition. She had to live there for a year before she could sell it. The lawyer estimated it was worth over a million dollars. Desperate, she left Arizona and travelled to the far north only to discover that the house and its surroundings had been abandoned for twenty years. She was almost defeated due to the isolation, being stuck in the snow, the bitterly cold weather and an encounter with a grizzly bear.. Was it not for her greataunt's first journal that gave her strength and courage would she have survived? Find out by reading this beautifully written, well researched novel. A quick read.
I read this as an ARC, and must disclose that I know the author and Dundurn is also my publisher.
Elinor Florence is a consummate storyteller who skillfully uses her research skills to produce wonderful Canadian fiction. I loved her first book, Bird's Eye View, too.
Wildwood focuses on a pioneering family in the Peace River country in northern Canada. Florence deftly weaves together the present-day heroine with her great-aunt who settled the land and built a farm in this area. The winters are brutal if you don't have running water and electricity.... She loops the single parent of the present around her aunt's journal.
The setting is so well written, I could have been living alongside the two characters. Their trials, troubles, and crises are believable, and there are many because neither were prepared for the hardships. But there are wonderful moments of joy as the heroine eventually succeeds in gaining her inheritance from her aunt. I'm not saying more or I will spoil the book for the reader.
The book is a delightful read, beautifully constructed and written, and a must-read!!
Please write more, Elinor!!
Wildwood is a well-researched and atmospheric story told in an interesting fashion. Florence really evokes what it's like to live in a remote area, facing daily challenges that city folk just never have to face. This novel will appeal to many different sorts of readers, ranging from those those who enjoy the special feeling that diary excerpts add to a story, those who dream of becoming modern homesteaders to those who are single parents, facing all the financial and emotional challenges that go with that.
Thank you to NetGalley for this ARC.
Wildwood by Elinor Florence is now in my top 10 all time favorite novels. I loved everything about this book. The writing style is smooth and flows so well. I enjoyed the diary sections as much as the current time sections. The comparisons worked well. The characters were fully devoloped and grew emotionally and physically during the time spent in Juniper at Wildwood. I enjoyed the knowledge gained about the pioneers and the indigenous people, the landscape, the surrounding nature of the land, the length of winter and summer days. All amazing. Thank you Net Galley. I will add this author to my list of favorites.
Beautiful description of rural Canada and homesteading through a modern view point. A relaxing read, a combination of history and contemporary fiction, perfect for those readers enjoying Wiseman.
Wildwood, Elinor Florence
Review from Jeannie Zelos book reviews
Genre: General fiction (adult), women's fiction.
Well this was one of those reads which was a real treasure. It merges past and present beautifully with present day Molly, reading the diaries of her great aunt, first owner of wildwood, and the story of their struggles to live in such an inhospitable environment.
Molly and Bridget are wonderful, Molly, having had a hard life and been disappointed one too many times in love, is determined its just her and Bridget now. Bridget has elective mutism, and was having treatment, as she can speak but will only talk to Molly.
Then things change, Molly loses her job, they can't afford Bridget's therapy, can't afford the apartment and are facing homelessness when she gets contacted by a solicitor about her great aunts will.
Its the first Molly knows about her family, and comes as a shock. She will inherit Wildwood and can do with it as she pleases but first she has to live there for a year. Or she can take a lump sum which would give them a few months reprieve. $50,000 or $1.5 million...There's a $400 a month rental from land contracted out if she chooses to stay there which will provide the basics.
Of course she opts to stay but the house has been closed up for many years and is filthy, and Molly and Bridget seem to have a bit of a germ mania....frantic cleaning restores it to its glory, a beautiful home but with no plumbing, no electricity. They're going to be living much as the ancestors did. Molly finds the diary of her great aunts first year, when she was just 18, along with other books, and they help her so much. She a city girl, can't cook, knows nothing of country life, how to live in a place where the answer to everything is Google.
I loved seeing the story from the present, Bridget and Molly having great days, having bad days, having scary days. I loved Winona, young girl from the local reservation who came to be such a friend and help to the family.
She had a tough life and the diary talks about Annie Bearspaw, who was her great grandmother ( I think) and a famous healer.
I loved how they changed over the course of the year, grew in confidence, how Bridget became a different child from the scared, timid one she was, Molly learned practical skills, and Winona opened out from the quiet ,slightly sullen girl we first met. .
There's a hint of romance and that made the book perfect for me, Colin was a great guy, it was clear how he felt about Molly, Bridget and Winona, and how they felt for him. The gentle way the romance played out, taking a very back role in the story was perfect.
Of course its not all sweet and light, there are reminders of how harsh the land is, how unforgiving of mistakes, how people have to take care at all times not to get lost to the vagaries of nature.
Lisette, reader of bodice ripper romance, with her vivid clothes and tortured hairstyles, secretary to Mr Jones ( Franklin) the solicitor who handles everything. I adored her, and felt so sad for her when she realised just how things were going, that she was another victim of the “wife doesn't understand me” justification. I looked forward to seeing what she was wearing, what she was reading each month. She had a perfect end too – and I hope she went on to go far, she was such a kind, sunny person.
I made a couple of notes while reading..the rhubarb pie Molly so proudly makes but doesn't add enough sugar, reminded me of a time when I made two perfect rhubarb crumbles for my husband and my friend. I don't like rhubarb but they did, and the crumbles looked perfect. Only issue was I forgot the sugar, not added too little but forgot it altogether! Yeach...really sour.
The second note, not humorous at all was the reference to Winona's ancestors, victims of the Residential School system. The whites of the time were so obnoxious we decided Native Indians needed education in our ways, and removed whole families of their children, taking them far away to residential schools. No chance to object, no thought for the kids or the families who lost them, it was just done. Of course they weren't going to be accepted by the whites even if well educated, and taken away from their support system they lost their place, their role in the Native Indian group too, turned into people with no real place in the world.
How arrogant we can be at times. I'd read about this a couple of years back and had no knowledge of it before, but it was quite widespread, no doubt all the “do-good” types patting themselves on the back for a job well done, when in reality they ruined lives of the kids taken away and the families left behind.
Ah well, that's today's rant over ;-) read this book if you love history brought to life, to see the past through the eyes of people living it.
Stars: Five, great read, real situation, past and present both felt very real, its not a one plot story but one with some real substance to it. One I will reread.
ARC supplied for review purposes by Netgalley and Publishers