BLURB:
Raised
in a crumbling New England mansion by four women with personalities as split as
a cracked mirror, young Francis Grayson has an obsessive need to fix them all.
There’s his mother, distant and beautiful Magdalene; his disfigured,
suffocating Aunt Stella; his odious grandmother; and the bane of his existence,
his abusive and delusional Aunt Lothian.
For
years, Francis plays a tricky game of duck and cover with the women, turning to
music to stay sane. He finds a friend and mentor in Aidan Madsen, schoolmaster,
local Revolutionary War historian, musician and keeper of the Grayson women’s
darkest secrets. In a skillful move by Fullbright, those secrets are revealed
through the viewpoints of three different people–Aidan, Francis and
Francis’stepdaughter, Elyse–adding layers of eloquent complexity to a story as
powerful as it is troubling.
While
Francis realizes his dream of forming his own big band in the 1940s, his
success is tempered by the inner monster of his childhood, one that roars to
life when he marries Elyse’s mother. Elyse becomes her stepfather’s favorite
target, and her bitterness becomes entwined with a desire to know the real
Francis Grayson.
For
Aidan’s part, his involvement with the Grayson family only deepens, and secrets
carried for a lifetime begin to coalesce as he seeks to enlighten Francis–and
subsequently Elyse–of why the events of so many years ago matter now. The
ugliness of deceit, betrayal and resentment permeates the narrative, yet
there are shining moments of hope, especially in the relationship between Elyse
and her grandfather.
Ultimately,
as more of the past filters into the present, the question becomes: What is the
truth, and whose version of the truth is correct? Fullbright never untangles
this conundrum, and it only adds to the richness of this exemplary novel.—Kirkus
Reviews
EXCERPT:
ELYSE
1955
It is said that love
is comfort, and that comfort comes from recognition of the beloved. Papa was
the first to tell me this, and if it’s even a little bit true, then I took my
comfort for granted, not realizing that one can’t truly appreciate the beloved
until one yearns for the comfort to be returned. Even now, when I can’t sleep
at night, when I can’t slow the speeding of my heart, when I can’t stop the
replaying of what-if’s in my head, I take myself back to that place where
cabbage roses dance on walls and my beloved reigns supreme; where I am queen of
his heart and he is my comfort, and then and only then do I feel safe.
You’d think it would
be enough, being able to conjure up at least a measure of my old, first love.
Yet for a long while it wasn’t. Because I was incapable of stanching the
nagging questions about my second, almost greater love. Questioning why Francis
hadn’t seen the truth of it like Papa had; that the streak I’d struggled with
hadn’t been born of badness; that badness wasn’t an intrinsic part of me like
my eyes being blue.
But Francis, unfortunately,
hadn’t been able to see through things the way Papa had, and that was because
Francis had rarely felt safe. You could see it in the way Francis’s eyes got
doubtful taking in a room, and the way he was always biting down on his lower
lip. The way it looked as if he was always trying to keep himself from crying.
REVIEW SOUND
BYTES
From Kirkus Reviews
"Secrets and lies suffuse generations of one Pennsylvania
family . . . in a skillful move by Fullbright, those secrets are
revealed through the viewpoints of three very different people . .
. a superb debut that exposes the consequences of the choices we make and
legacy's sometimes excruciating embrace."
2012 DISCOVERY AWARD
GLOBAL E-BOOK AWARD NOMINEE
From Midwest Book Review
"A very human story . . . a fine read focusing on the long lasting dysfunction of family."
"There is something fascinating in labyrinthine plot twists, which is what we have here, and I must applaud Fullbright for her keen and magical ability to pull it off with such aplomb."-Norm Goldman, Montreal Books Examiner and Bookpleasures.com
5 Stars ***** Reviewed by Joana James for Readers Favorite: "The Angry Woman Suite is quite a ride . . . very cleverly written . . . an outstanding novel."
Rating: 5.0 stars Reviewed by Anne B. for Readers Favorite:" Lee Fullbright is master of characterization."
Rating: 5.0 stars Reviewed by Alice D. for Readers Favorite:"The Angry Woman Suite is a brilliant, complex, complicated story about talented, complicated people . . . this is a story to remember!"
AUTHOR
INFORMATION:
Lee
Fullbright, a medical practice consultant in her non-writing life, lives on San
Diego’s beautiful peninsula with her writing partner, Baby Rae, a 12-year-old
rescued Australian cattle dog with attitude.
The Angry Woman
Suite,
a Kirkus Critics’ pick, 5-starred Readers Favorite, and a Discovery Aware
winner, is her first published novel.
LINKS:
Facebook
page: http://www.facebook.com/#!/fullbrightlee
Blog/website:
http://www.leefullbright.com
Lee will be giving away a $50 Amazon gift certificate to one randomly drawn commenter at the end of the tour.) The tour dates can be found here: http://goddessfishpromotions.blogspot.com/2013/02/blurb-blitz-tour-angry-woman-suite-by.html
~*~
Have a great weekend, everyone. Hope to see you Monday.
17 comments:
Thank you for hosting today.
Hi Lee,
I'm wondering how you came up with the title?
marypres(AT)gmail(DOT)com
My pleasure, Goddess.
Hi Mary, thanks for stopping by and supporting, Lee.
When I read stories about such dysfunctional families, it makes me thankful that mine is just a wee bit dysfunctional!
catherinelee100 at gmail dot com
Thank you for hosting me and The Angry Woman Suite!
Hi Mary, My agent came up with the title, which refers to a suite of portraits that figure predominantly in the plot.
Hi Catherine, Great fodder for stories, though!
Intriguing story, if you made a movie version who'd play the main characters?
fencingromein at hotmail dot com
Sounds like a fabulous read. Thank you for the excerpts.
Kit3247(at)aol(dot)com
Hey Shannon, For the movie version: Cate Blanchett for Magdalene; Dakota Fanning for Elyse; Ryan Gosling for Francis, and Robert Redford for the older Aidan-- fun!
Ohmagerd!!! Ryan Gosling as Francis!! Sign me up for this in book, movie, tv, Whatever! Thanks for sharing!!!
andralynn7@gmail.com
Nice casting choices
bn100candg at hotmail dot com
You are welcome, Andra :) :) And thank you, bn100 and Ingeborg!
And, Shannon, for the casting question!
oh, poor Francis!
Excellent excerpt! Can't wait to read this book!
It'll be interesting to see how the characters interact!
vitajex(at)aol(dot)com
Post a Comment