Review by Darcie Czajkowski
Friendship. That is what bound Madison, Rachel, Barbara, and
Melinda together for fifteen years. Their husbands' common profession as
physicians inspired their bond, but the girls fell in love with each other in a
way so sacred that they chose to carve out time each August to spend a week at
the beach. And became the Girls of August.
But the sudden, heart-stopping death of Melinda put an abrupt end
to their summer vacations. They could not fathom reuniting without her.
That being said, Baby is gracious enough to allow the Girls of August into her family's beach house on a far-flung island off the South Carolina coast.
The original, real Girls of August come into the vacation saddled with prejudice and Baby's youthful antics seem to confirm their fears. And then some. Yet as time ticks along on the removed, rustic island and secrets seep from cracks and rise to the surface, it appears that the only thing the ladies were right about is that nothing is as it once was.
Despite a slow start, The Girls of August navigates the depths of
genuine friendship. It shares a real, true story of girls whose love, respect,
and admiration for one another started as youthful kinship and developed into
solid relationships that have endured for a generation and will continue
blossom for decades to come. The gap in time initially feels nonexistent to the
women as they reminisce about past summers and the joys and sorrows of those
moments, but when the stories emerge about the years since their last reunion,
it is both amazing and startling just how much has transpired. Anne Rivers
Siddons writes with clear, precise language and realistic dialogue in this rich
story of women who, despite their different life paths, chose to treasure the
moments in life that matter the most. For time is a gift and there exists no
better way to spend it than with those who make you grateful to be alive.
Purchase the book at:
About the
Author:
Anne
Rivers Siddons is an American novelist who writes stories set in the southern United
States. She was raised in Fairburn, Georgia, and attended Auburn
University, where she was a member of the Delta Delta Delta Sorority.
While at Auburn she wrote a column for the student newspaper, The
Auburn Plainsman, that favored integration. The university administration
attempted to suppress the column, and ultimately fired her, and the column
garnered national attention. She later became a senior editor for Atlanta magazine.
At the age of thirty she married Heyward Siddons. She lives in Charleston,
South Carolina, and spends summers in Maine.
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