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Burning Marguerite
Burning Marguerite | Elizabeth Inness-Brown
1 post | 2 read | 2 to read
One winter morning James Jack Wright finds ninety-four-year-old Marguerite Deo—the woman he has always known as “Tante”—lying dead in the woods outside his cabin, clad only in a flowered nightgown. With this arresting scene, Elizabeth Inness-Brown ushers readers into her mysterious and lyrical narrative, the story of two closely braided lives that forces a reconsideration of our notions of maternity, loyalty, love, and perhaps death itself. As James Jack sets out to fulfill Marguerite’s unusual last wishes, the narrative unveils the secrets of their pasts. It arcs from Depression-era New Orleans to a barren New England island at the turn of the century, from an illicit passion and an unforgivable crime to the relationship between a small boy and a tough, reclusive woman who turns out to possess an unsuspected capacity for love. From the Trade Paperback edition.
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LeafingThroughLife
Burning Marguerite | Elizabeth Inness-Brown
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Though it gets off to slow start, Burning Marguerite eventually drew me in to a story of a woman with secrets and the young man who only knows her as his beloved Tante. In tandem the book follows James Jack as he prepares to set her soul free even as, in the pages, the dark story of her past is finally liberated. The book feels a bit ethereal, blending the unreality of new grief with the clear memory of time past. It‘s a slow, satisfying burn.

SilversReviews Gorgeous cover. 4y
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