The Lost Garden, by Katharine Swartz
You may be surprised (nay, perhaps shocked) at how little I read when traveling. All those flights, train trips, early evenings – one would think I’d be in book heaven…but afraid not. I gaze out at the scenery during train journeys holding my book (or kindle) unopened. I find myself catching up on missed movies during long flights and, as a typically tired tourist (all that walking, exploring, eating, navigating and translating) I fall asleep as soon as my head hits the pillow. So my reading falls by the wayside.
I wanted an easy-going book for this most recent trip. Nothing too complicated with multiplying characters or, even worse, a family tree to keep straight. I knew while in Switzerland, I would be happily distracted and pleasantly tired. I would only be reading in short bits and pieces.
I’d been saving the The Lost Garden just for this trip. I eagerly awaited this historical novel of a hidden garden with secrets, a dual time-line (present day and just after WWII) and set in rural England. (I know, I’m boringly quite predictable.)
It also held charm because it brought to mind The Secret Garden one of my all-time favorite and cherished children’s books.
The Lost Garden is both a mystery and family saga set at Bower House, on the edge of a village church property with a hidden walled garden. In 1919, nineteen-year-old Eleanor Sanderson is grieving the death of her brother so her father hires a young gardener, Jack to restore the walled garden to comfort her. Eleanor falls for Jack especially once he reveals the garden to her. (I won’t give away the special garden he created – just know it’s magical.) Problems arise, secrets are kept and the garden is at the center of it all.
In the present day, Marin Ellis has taken on the custody of her sulky 15 year old half-sister, Rebecca. They move to Bower house to try and start a new life for themselves. They, too, are grieving the sudden accidental death of their parents. When Rebecca shows a spark of interest in the now decrepit walled garden, Marin hires Joss, a local gardener to help them restore the garden. Together, they uncover the garden’s past and its secrets – and again friendships and romance evolve around the lost garden.
I found the characters authentic and the setting just so darn dreamy (I want my own secret garden…). For those readers who want a fast moving plot and high drama – this is not a book for you, as The Lost Garden moves gently and slowly along. I found myself living with its characters, breathing in the rooms of the house and seeing the garden transformed in both time periods.
A purely pleasant read for total escape to a magical secret garden — some times that’s all you need.
Digital review copy provided by Lion Fiction via NetGalley.
Can’t wait to read this book. And, yes, the Secret Garden was near perfect and unforgettable, but no picture, no movie can compare with the garden you create in your own mind while reading that classic. Love Barmy, keep it up. s.a.