A Place with Promise
A Novel
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
The magical multigenerational saga of an unforgettable Texas family
At the turn of the twentieth century, Isaac Overstreet goes looking for a bride and finds Elizabeth "Bessie" Treadway standing in the middle of the Sabine River. Leaving her sisters without explanation, carrying her three pet cranes, Bessie slips into Isaac's boat and returns with him to Camp Ruby—a tiny backwoods East Texas community too humble to be called a real town.
In Isaac's broken-down shack, they start a family together. First come the twin daughters, the Ruby-Jewels, followed by Zeda Earl, always sour and dissatisfied with the life she has been born into.
For all of Zeda Earl's ennui, there is magic on the shores of the Sabine, where angels fish and the seriously deranged sometimes bring about miracles. For the Overstreets and their eccentric friends and neighbors, every day in Camp Ruby holds new wonder—until the simple ways they have come to rely on are threatened by a dangerous unwanted interloper called progress.
Edward Swift, the acclaimed author of Splendora and Principia Martindale, brings us a fable for our time—a wondrous tale of family and community, rich in color and imagination and suffused with everyday magic.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Elizabeth Treadway was standing in the Sabine River, her three pet cranes nearby, when Isaac Overstreet came down from Camp Ruby in search of a wife. She didn't even wave goodbye to her sisters when she climbed in Isaac's boat and told him he'd found what he'd been looking for. Settling in to Camp Ruby, something less than a bona fide town in turn-of-the-century East Texas, Bessie Overstreet makes a home of Isaac's ramshackle house, establishes herself with the townspeople, and begins her life-long effort to hybridize a purple daylily. Soon their twin daughters, the Ruby-Jewels, are born, and some years later another girl, ever-cranky Zeda Earl. The people of Camp Ruby accept life's mysteries and each others' eccentricities as comfortably as they live on the shifting shore of the Sabine. The twins leave home to live with the teacher's son high in an abandoned water tower, where they patch prize-winning crazy quilts; Isaac fishes on the Sabine with a clumsy angel; the deranged Billy Wiggins brings satisfaction to the doctor's insatiable daughter. While neither their superstitions nor wisdom can withstand the inroads of progress, something of their quirky grit lasts. In the end, it's the least likely Zeda Earl in whom the spirit of the time and place is carried on. Swift exhibits plenty of his own wisdom and imagination in this novel, following Splendora and Principia Martindale.