Thursday, February 27, 2014

Review: At Least You're In Tuscany by Jennifer Criswell

Title:  At Least You're in Tuscany: A Somewhat Disastrous Quest for the Sweet Life

Author: Jennifer Criswell
Publisher: 
Gemelli PressLLC (September 28, 2012)
ISBN-13: 9780098210237
Pages: 222 Kindle Edition
How I Read It: ARC copy
Genre: Memoirs, Travel, Non-fiction


 Synopsis:
At Least You’re in Tuscany: A Somewhat Disastrous Quest for the Sweet Life is Jennifer Criswell’s memoir about her first year in Montepulciano during which her dream of expat life meets the reality of everyday challenges and results in sometimes funny, often frustrating, always lesson-filled situations.

Jennifer Criswell’s move from New York City to Tuscany was not supposed to go like this. She had envisioned lazy mornings sipping espresso while penning a best-selling novel and jovial Sunday group dinners, just like in the movies and books about expatriate life in Italy. But then she met the reality: no work, constant struggles with Italian bureaucracy to claim citizenship through her ancestors, and, perhaps worst of all, becoming the talk of the town after her torrid affair with a local fruit vendor.

At Least You’re in Tuscany is the intimate, honest, and often hilarious tale of Jennifer’s first year in Montepulciano. During that time, her internal optimist was forced to work overtime, reminding her that if she were going to be homeless, lonely, and broke, at least she would be all those things—in Tuscany. Jennifer’s mantra, along with a healthy dose of enthusiasm, her willingness to embrace Italian culture, and lessons gleaned from small-town bumbling’s, help her not only build a new, rewarding life in Italy but also find herself along the way.

Our thoughts:

We are always attracted to stories of this nature – what would it be like to transplant your life to some exotic destination, such as Tuscany in this case? So when Criswell wrote, “not just picking up roots but planting them in the right spot”, we thought this was a good sign. Not to be.

Would you quit your job, pack your bags, and move to another country – alone - where you knew no one close, hardly spoke the language, understood even less, and where your paperwork entitling you to work was not well down the path of completion? Well, you might. We certainly wouldn't. But that's exactly what Jennifer Criswell did. So this tale of wonderful escapism and wanting to “live in a place where even the birds took time to enjoy the small pleasures of everyday life” very quickly deteriorated into that hilarious episode of “I Love Lucy” Criswell made reference to – “sadly for me my episode didn’t include hiking up my skirt and stomping grapes. Nor was it only half an hour. Or particularly funny.” Her modified mantra of “at least you’re in Tuscany” downgraded to “at least the day is crap in Tuscany” and “at least you have no friends and can’t speak the language in Tuscany.”

Hhmmmmm….o-k-a-y.

We loved traveling in Italy and feel Criswell certainly captured many realistic attributes of not only the countryside and culture but also life in a small village. Her long struggle to find work made the book seem to drag on, and we kept reading while feeling increasingly disconnected from her. At first, we thought she was twenty-something, because her decisions seemed like so at times, and therefore we were sympathetic and relating to that, especially her arrival in Tuscany before she even got the final papers for a work permit. But when we discovered she was turning forty, it felt like quite an immature and foolhardy thing to do, to travel all that way without really considering everything necessary to make such an enormous life change.

There were funny moments that had us giggling such as “escaping death by toilet on the first night in Italy” and her frozen duvet cover on the clothesline. Ultimately, however, we found ourselves wishing to get a more positive spin on her overall life lesson – “I learned quickly enough living a dream is very different from having a dream – I was about to meet a whole different me along the way.”

Let’s hope that she likes her new self.

Our Rating




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Sunday, February 23, 2014

Review: Lost Lake by Sarah Addison Allen

Title:  Lost Lake
Author: Sarah Addison Allen
Publisher: 
St. Martin's Press (Jan. 21, 2014)
ISBN-10: 1444787098
Pages: 304 Kindle Edition
How I Read It: ebook
Genre: Magical Realism, Southern Fiction

Synopsis:

It happens one morning - Kate finally wakes up from the slumber she's been in since her husband's death a year ago. Feeling a fresh sense of desire to take control of her and her young daughter's life, she decides to visit Suley, Georgia - home to Lost Lake. It's where Kate spent one of the happiest summers of her life as a child. She's not sure what she expects to find there, but it's not a rundown place full of ghosts and other curious oddities. Kate's Aunt Eby, Lost Lake's owner, wants to sell the old place and move on. Lost Lake's magic is gone. As Kate discovers that time has a way of standing still at Lost Lake, can she bring the cottages - as well as her heart and the hearts of all the guests - back to life? Because sometimes lost loves aren't really lost. They're just waiting for you to find them again. 


Our thoughts:

What a delight to read a new book from Sarah Addison Allen!
In her first release in 3 years, she has once again written an utterly charming tale with a full cast of interesting characters and an enchanting location. As grieving Kate and her daughter Devin return to a favourite retreat from Kate’s childhood hoping to experience a “last best summer,” Kate and the inhabitants they encounter there find strengths they didn’t realize they possessed and learn heart-warming lessons about what really matters most in life. Each, in their own way, discovers “You can’t change where you came from, but you can change where you go from here. Just like a book. If you don’t like the ending, you make up a new one,” and indeed they do!

The author deftly incorporates magical realism within the story in a subtle and believable way, and her quirky but loveable characters manage to overcome their personal flaws to find redemption in the end. Even though you may predict the eventual outcomes before the story actually ends, the prose is so lovely and the tale so whimsical and captivating, that you simply don’t mind as you drink it in and enjoy the ride to reach your final destination.

Reading Lost Lake is like taking a mini-vacation all bound up within the pages of a book. We cannot recommend this title highly enough, so come away to Lost Lake!

Our Rating 

 

Saturday, February 22, 2014

Welcome to Great Reads and Tea Leaves!

The only thing we love more than a great cup of tea is a really great book.
Great Reads and Tea Leaves was created to share that passion and to inspire
a love of reading in others by discussing and recommending the amazing books
we discover. So sit back and join us for a great read and a cuppa!