I never know what to expect when I send my book out for review but I didn't expect this when I entered IndieReader's Discovery Book Awards: Blue Hydrangeas was rated 4 stars, making it "Indie Reader Approved," which, in their words, means "very much worth the read." And it's in the running for an Indie Reader Discovery Book Award. Winners will be announced at Book Expo America on June 1. I'm hoping for the best.
IndieReader is “the
essential consumer guide to self-published books and the people who
write them.” Book Review Coordinator Maya Fleischmann, who notified me of their review, wrote "your title was judged by top industry professionals—not as merely a great indie book—but as a great book, period." Oh my, please don't wake me up!
Here's their review:
BLUE HYDRANGEAS
Fiction
Marianne Sciucco, Bunky Press, 2013
4 stars
A sadly realistic tale of a woman’s descent into dementia,
with a strong sense of enduring love at its core.
As this novel makes all too clear, Alzheimer’s disease
hits families with sneaky cruelty, an emotional nickel-and-diming that picks up
pace relentlessly over time. Small omissions (where were those car keys, anyway?) inexorably progress to stovetop
burners left untended and cars driven in circles to nowhere. That’s the painful
predicament faced by the central characters of this story, whose life dissolves
into an anxiety-ridden obstacle course after an Alzheimer’s diagnosis.
In BLUE HYDRANGEAS, author Marianne Sciucco tackles her
painful subject with honesty and deep affection for her key characters. Jack
and Sara Harmon’s retirement tranquility explodes when Sara’s worrying lapses
snowball into an Alzheimer’s diagnosis, and the increasingly desperate Jack struggles
to keep his promise that he will never institutionalize his wife. Of course,
Sara’s deepening disorientation won’t be denied forever, and the day is fast
approaching when she and Jack will have to leave their beloved
bed-and-breakfast by the sea, the “Blue Hydrangeas” of the novel’s title. How
this crisis reaches its peak is a story that Sciucco, a nurse and former
newspaper reporter, invests with sadly realistic detail.
There are some bumps in the storytelling, mostly due to
excessive reliance on flashbacks, which tend to stall the plot’s momentum. And
some minor characters, such as a loutish grandson who calls poor Sara “crazy”, veer
perilously close to becoming cartoon-like. But for the most part it’s engaging
and affecting, chiefly due to the couple at its center – Sara, a warm and vital
artist lost in a fog of confusion; and steadfast Jack, torn between his own
robust good sense and his guilt at the prospect of relinquishing his beloved
wife to a care facility. While making it crystal clear that there can be no
happy ending here, Sciucco manages to convey the hard-won peace that can follow
when a wrenching family struggle is negotiated and resolved with love.
BLUE HYDRANGEAS traces a couple’s struggle with
Alzheimer’s in an effective story that doesn’t pull its punches, but remains
compassionate and absorbing.
Reviewed by Liz Lynch for IndieReader
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