Bad Girl Creek: A Novel by Jo-Ann Mapson

Bad Girl Creek: A Novel

Jo-Ann Mapson
384 pages
Simon & Schuster
May 2001
Hardcover
All Fiction WSBN
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From Publishers Weekly The bestselling author of such hits as Hank & Chloe and Blue Rodeo launches a trilogy with this sentimental novel of communal life and reinvented family, centering on four women who come together, tending to each other and healing old wounds. Phoebe DeThomas has lived carefully all her life. Thirty-eight years old and in a wheelchair because of a bad heart, she's always felt dwarfed by her flamboyant aunt Sadie and her successful brother James. Now Sadie has died, bequeathing her a flower farm on California's Central Coast. In order to make a go of it, Phoebe takes in three women as boarder/farmhands. Each of the three is "homeless," having recently undergone traumatic life changes: Ness, a black cowgirl with a horse and a secret fear that she has AIDS, has lost her job; Nance, a down-on-her-luck Southern belle, has broken up with her boyfriend; and Beryl, a former kindergarten aide with a prison record, has been evicted from her apartment. All have families that are less than perfect and, living under the same roof, they soon become like blood relatives as they share their secrets and learn to trust again. Mapson combines poignancy with the good-natured banter of girlfriends in her tale of women in transition, waiting to be reborn. Short on conflict but long on comfort and characterization, this is neither the author's best nor her deepest work. Still, there are enough of the quiet charms that fans have come to expect for them to tune into the second installment when it is released. Agent, Deborah Schneider. 50,000 first printing; BOMC, Literary Guild and Doubleday Book Club alternate selection; 13-city author tour. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc. From School Library Journal Adult/High School-When her aunt dies, Phoebe DeThomas finds herself the owner of a 40-acre flower farm, complete with debts and only one farmhand. Having to deal with her bad heart, her life in a wheelchair, and the financial problems brought on by the inheritance, she takes in three boarders who assist in running the farm. The women form strong bonds that help them all through the joys and heartbreaks of their lives. Phoebe finds love but has to battle pneumonia along with her other problems. Ness, the strong-willed, protective black farrier, discovers that she may be carrying the AIDS virus. Beryl has been in prison for murder, and Nance struggles to recover from her relationship with a boyfriend, even as she falls in love with Phoebe's brother. The setting is a picturesque area along central California's coast, where the weather and environment become major factors in the success or failure of the flower farm. Mapson draws another layer of interest with the detailed storytelling that deals with the naming of Bad Girl Creek. This helps define the physical geography as well as the people who live there. A contemporary story with a realistic perspective and a positive ending, this book should appeal to readers who have enjoyed Barbara Kingsolver's work.
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About this book
Pages 384
Publisher Simon & Schuster
Published 2001
Readers 1