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Truelove and Homegrown Tomatoes

Truelove and Homegrown Tomatoes

List Price: $19.95
Your Price: $19.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Must Read !
Review: A great read ! Couldn't put it down! Let's have more like this !

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Southern Charm
Review: A truly charming book. I could not put it down. An insight into the life of an aging southern lady and her love of gardening. Glimpse into the trials and tribulations of her life. I sincerely hope Julie Cannon has another novel in the works.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A great southern read!
Review: Any reader from the South will recognize many Southern traditions and truisms in this book. Julie Cannon captures the authentic feel of small towns in the South,and the people who inhabit them. I had the privilege of hearing Julie read an excerpt of her new book 'Mater Biscuit at a local Barnes and Noble. This book continues the story of the characters in Truelove...Needless to say,I have my name on the library reserve list!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A new talent in the Southern literary tradition
Review: I thoroughly enjoyed this book. Julie Cannon is an immense new talent, along the lines of Lee Smith and Flannery O'Connor. Cannon writes in a conversational, casual tone that fits right in with the classic tradition of Southern literature. The characters and situations ring true to small town Southern life. Kudos to Julie Cannon; may she have a long, vibrant career!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The tomato patch as a metaphor for life
Review: Imogene, recently widowed, embarks on a new hair style and a series of new and outrageously unsuitable men, but she's pulled back to home base by three things: her rebellious teenage daughter, her calmer and younger niece, and her garden. Healing of a broken heart comes with time, just as a well-tended garden will once again yield a bumper crop of tomatoes, and just when they are needed most.
Sweet.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Talk of fresh foods from the garden make mouth water
Review: Julie Cannon seems to be capitalizing on the rage of Southern writers writing about the homey folks of modern day Georgia, particularly one widowed Imogene Lavender and her "daughters", Jeanette and Loutishie. With the voice of Lou, actually Imo's niece, aiding the recollection of the story, one visits the life of a most unusual family of farm folk with a head of household old enough to be a grandmother, not mother, and a down home association that is strictly green thumb Baptist goodness.

Interestingly enough, Imogene, called Imo, is the hot ticket for the other ladies of Euharlee, Georgia, to find a fella for and match her off in as fast order as possible. To soothe her grief after a 48-year marriage, Imo is encouraged to try all the modern means of meeting a new man, including the big city grocery market version of singles clubs. Of course, those ways are artificial for Imo, and she has troubles enough, what with rebellious teen hormones thriving in her daughter Jeanette who is entangled in an illicit relationship with the immigrant Dairy Queen manager. In addition,Lou stubbornly seeks to waylay any serious attempts Imo may make toward courtship, as she faithfully clings to the memory of Uncle Silas, now deceased.

Within the plotline of contrived courtship and a potential of at least three would-be mates, Imo and her girls manage to produce bumper crops of fresh vegetables to feed the poor of Eurharlee, particularly tomatoes. And a reader who loves fresh vegetables will find the descriptions of vine-ripened fruit too tempting.

What author Cannon is creating in this tale of alternated telling: one chapter third person, the next a journal version of Lou's, is the start of a series of books about Imo and her crew. For the next volume entitled 'Mater Biscuit is due in March of 2004.

If you need a light read with some laugh-out-loud characters and situations, particularly those involving the hard of hearing Fenton Mabry, this book is for you. If you are always longing for a small town read redolent of the charms of Jan Karon's Mitford series, or Fannie Flagg's Alabama and Missouri tales, this book will amuse you. We all know that there are 65-year-old women who head up households after being widowed or divorced, and the next book in the series presents the introduction of yet another female of the family, the 84-year-old mother of Imo who is coming to live with her and her crew. The span of generations is growing in the Lavender farm house. Could lead to fun, maybe even a film version.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Talk of fresh foods from the garden make mouth water
Review: Julie Cannon seems to be capitalizing on the rage of Southern writers writing about the homey folks of modern day Georgia, particularly one widowed Imogene Lavender and her "daughters", Jeanette and Loutishie. With the voice of Lou, actually Imo's niece, aiding the recollection of the story, one visits the life of a most unusual family of farm folk with a head of household old enough to be a grandmother, not mother, and a down home association that is strictly green thumb Baptist goodness.

Interestingly enough, Imogene, called Imo, is the hot ticket for the other ladies of Euharlee, Georgia, to find a fella for and match her off in as fast order as possible. To soothe her grief after a 48-year marriage, Imo is encouraged to try all the modern means of meeting a new man, including the big city grocery market version of singles clubs. Of course, those ways are artificial for Imo, and she has troubles enough, what with rebellious teen hormones thriving in her daughter Jeanette who is entangled in an illicit relationship with the immigrant Dairy Queen manager. In addition,Lou stubbornly seeks to waylay any serious attempts Imo may make toward courtship, as she faithfully clings to the memory of Uncle Silas, now deceased.

Within the plotline of contrived courtship and a potential of at least three would-be mates, Imo and her girls manage to produce bumper crops of fresh vegetables to feed the poor of Eurharlee, particularly tomatoes. And a reader who loves fresh vegetables will find the descriptions of vine-ripened fruit too tempting.

What author Cannon is creating in this tale of alternated telling: one chapter third person, the next a journal version of Lou's, is the start of a series of books about Imo and her crew. For the next volume entitled 'Mater Biscuit is due in March of 2004.

If you need a light read with some laugh-out-loud characters and situations, particularly those involving the hard of hearing Fenton Mabry, this book is for you. If you are always longing for a small town read redolent of the charms of Jan Karon's Mitford series, or Fannie Flagg's Alabama and Missouri tales, this book will amuse you. We all know that there are 65-year-old women who head up households after being widowed or divorced, and the next book in the series presents the introduction of yet another female of the family, the 84-year-old mother of Imo who is coming to live with her and her crew. The span of generations is growing in the Lavender farm house. Could lead to fun, maybe even a film version.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Better than Fried Green Tomatoes
Review: This is a wonderful book. At first, I didn't think it was for me, I like a slightly harder-edged story, but I was pulled in and loved every minute. I passed it along to my mother who was even crazier about it that I was. Much better that Fried Green Tomatoes! You can't go wrong.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Truelove & Homegrown Tomatoes
Review: Truelove & Homegrown Tomatoes is a story of faith, hope and appreciation. The novel centers around Imo Lavender who has recently lost her beloved husband Silas to cancer. Now in her 60's, with two girls to care for, Imo struggles to find the strength to go on with life without her husband.

One thing that Imo has always loved is her garden, where she grows the sweetest, best tasting tomatoes-something you can't buy in a grocery store. As Imo tries to pick up the pieces of her life, she finds her garden to be a great source of comfort and inspiration in her life.

Imo's journey at this turning point in her life is a touching story and is a cute, easy read. I would have liked to seen it get a bit more in depth with the characters, but all in all, it was a satisfying and likable read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: As warm & sweet as a vine ripened tomato-a beautiful story.
Review: Truelove and Homegrown Tomatoes is the wonderful, luscious, bittersweet story of how Imogene Lavender and her two daughters, Loutishie and Jeannete-one actually her niece and the other adopted-cope with life after Imogene's husband, Silas, passes on.

This is a story told with compassion and affection from tow distinctly different points of view-that of Imogene, through the regular text, and that of Loutishie, told through her journal. It chronicles their grieving for their father and husband and the inevitably difficult process of picking up the pieces and moving on. The book elegantly evokes the aspects of Southern tradition, mores and custom that both facilitate and aggravate that process.

Cannon's particularly gifted at characterization. Even minor characters are reverently constructed and rendered so that by the end of the book you feel as if you yourself are in fact a resident of Euharlee, Georgia and privy to all the goings on, habits and secrets and traditions that are common fodder in any such small rural enclave.

The construction of the story is extremely effective, with a short quote from each chapter which acts as an introduction, followed by Imogene's story, followed by Lou's journal.

This is the sort of story that grabs you by the heartstrings and won't let go, even after the book is over. It's a truly wonderful debut.

I can only hope-and pray-- that this is but the first in a long line of novels by Julie Cannon.


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