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It is early evening when Hope Tantry arrives at the small cottage in England’s pastoral Lake District where her mother, Ally, spent the last years of her life. Ally—one of a close-knit group of women who called themselves the Wednesday Sisters—had used the cottage as a writer’s retreat while she worked on her unpublished biography of Beatrix Potter, yet Hope knows little about her mother’s time there. Traveling with Hope are friends Anna Page and Julie, first introduced as little girls in The Wednesday Sisters, now grown women grappling with issues of a different era. They’ve come to help Hope sort through her mother’s personal effects, yet what they find is a tangled family history—one steeped in Lake District lore.
Hope finds a stack of Ally’s old notebooks tucked away in a hidden drawer, all written in a mysterious code. As she, Julie, and Anna Page try to decipher Ally’s writings—the reason for their encryption, their possible connection to the Potter manuscript—they are forced to confront their own personal struggles: Hope’s doubts about her marriage, Julie’s grief over losing her twin sister, Anna Page’s fear of commitment in relationships. And as the real reason for Ally’s stay in England comes to light, Hope, Julie, and Anna Page reach a new understanding about the enduring bonds of family, the unwavering strength of love, and the inescapable pull of the past.
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“The present and the past intertwine beautifully and inevitably in Meg Waite Clayton’s winning follow-up to The Wednesday Sisters. From the beguiling Lake District setting, to a completely charming (and spot-on) portrayal of Beatrix Potter, to the way the Wednesday daughters strive to unpuzzle both their own choices and their mothers’ legacies, every layer of the novel delivers. The Wednesday Daughters is utterly rich and satisfying.”—Paula McLain, New York Times bestselling author of The Paris Wife
“A captivating novel about mothers and daughters, lifelong friendships, love affairs, betrayals, and redemption. Clayton transports us to the English Lake District, an area rich in literary history and romance, where her characters’ secrets unfold in ways both satisfying and surprising.”—J. Courtney Sullivan, New York Times bestselling author of Commencement, Maine, and The Engagements
“Beautiful storytelling . . . [Meg Waite Clayton] delves deep into the human heart . . . and [will] keep you hanging on until the very last page is turned.”—RT Book Reviews
“The Wednesday Daughters is a bewitching escape of a novel. The characters became my beloved companions. I wanted it never to end.”—Elin Hilderbrand, author of Beautiful Day
“Heartwarming . . . filled with memorable characters.”—Bookreporter
Selected as Recommended Summer Reading by Chicago Tribune • Fort Worth Star-Telegram • San Jose Mercury News
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Creators
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Series
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Publisher
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Release date
July 16, 2013 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780345538840
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9780345538840
- File size: 2897 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Kirkus
June 1, 2013
This sequel to The Wednesday Sisters (2008) follows a second generation of sensitive friends as they travel to a cottage in England's Lake District to uncover secrets and bond, as Clayton's female characters are wont to do. Asha, a 40-ish lawyer also called Hope by her friends, has come to the cottage where her mother, Allison, an unpublished writer of children's stories about animals, spent a lot of time before her recent death. Asha is accompanied by Anna Page, a 51-year-old heart surgeon and the daughter of literary editor Kath; and 48-year-old librarian Julie, the daughter of Linda and sister of recently deceased Jamie. Each woman has issues: Asha, whose maternal grandparents had nothing to do with her because her father was Indian, is facing a crisis in her marriage to Kevin, who wants to start a family; never married Anna Page loves to play matchmaker for her friends, and even her mother, but has always avoided commitment/intimacy herself, probably because she was scarred by her father's long-term adultery; grieving Julie has been having an affair with Jamie's widower. In England, whiny Asha, who resents drama queen Anna Page's closeness to Allison, finds Allison's journal in which Beatrix Potter figures prominently, as if the dead author were still alive--passionate appreciation of Beatrix Potter is required to enjoy this novel. Asha also discovers both Allison's secret about her own heritage and her secret relationship with wealthy neighbor Graham. Meanwhile, Anna Page manipulates bookish, guilt-ridden Julie into a seemingly unlikely relationship with boatman Robbie, who is really a poet from Ireland on his own secret mission concerning his dead wife. Anna Page, who has a tendency to hand nice men over to others and keep jerks for herself, also tries to set up her visiting mother with Graham. But the men, handsome and sensitive as they may be, are really not the point, since the message is that these women solve each other's problems and know each other best. Contrived and convoluted in effecting feel-good spirituality.COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Booklist
June 1, 2013
Clayton follows up her popular book-club selection The Wednesday Sisters (2008) with this story featuring the now-grown daughters of the women from the original novel's writing club. Ally's daughter, Hopeaccompanied by the two other Wednesday Daughters, Anna Page and Julietravels to England to clear out the Lake District cottage her mother used as a writing haven. The women discover a stash of Ally's old notebooks, which seem to be written in code. Why would Ally have needed to keep secret writings, and what is the connection to the project she was working on at the end of her life (a biography of Beatrix Potter)? Why did Ally feel drawn to travel all the way to England to write? As the women try to unravel the puzzles left behind for them, they confront their own secrets and longings, as well as tapping into the eccentric life of Beatrix Potter. Fans of the first novel will be interested to see how the family secrets come to light and just where Beatrix Potter comes into play.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)
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