Showing posts with label Southern Fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Southern Fiction. Show all posts

4.08.2024

What the Mountains Remember ~ Review

What the Mountains Remember
By Joy Callaway

Belle Newbold's life is a facade. It hides the truth of her past, all she lost when her father died and her mother remarried. Her present and past are about to collide when her stepfather is invited to join Henry Ford's Vagabond camping tour. For the first time in seven years, she will be returning to the mountains and all its hidden memories. 

But it is more than a chance of a rare outdoor excursion for the wealthy upper class that is behind Belle's participation. No, she is being offered a chance to reunite with the man she is engaged to, a man she has only once before met. Worth Delafield is her chance at having a family and the assurance that she can have a simple life but one with financial stability. And she can have a marriage without the fear of a broken heart should he die young. She wants no entanglements of the heart, and the marriage her stepfather has arranged is the perfect way to secure her future without involving her heart.

I love the title of this book, What the Mountains Remember. One just thinks of all the secrets the mountains hold and what they have witnessed over the years. And this camping tour certainly reveals many secrets, some of which will alter the lives of those who are participating in it. And Belle's cousin Marie Austen—well, let's just say she is a character and not my favorite person in the book, but she is pivotal in parts of the storyline. 

I feel for Belle and how she had to hide her true self. Fear is a powerful motivator, and it has held Belle and her mother in its grip for the last seven years. This is a book of rediscovery, second chances, and finding love.

I loved the cover of this book, and it perfectly suits the story, which is set in 1913 North Carolina. Perfect for those who love historical women's centric fiction. As in all life some people are more likable than others, and in this case, I found Belle, Worth, and Shipley Newbold (Belle's stepfather) to be the characters I liked best.

I was provided a complimentary copy of this book with no expectations but that I provide my honest opinion. All thoughts expressed are my own.


About the Book:

 

At this wondrous resort, secrets can easily be hidden in plain sight when the eye is trained on beauty.

 

April 1913—Belle Newbold hasn’t seen mountains for seven years—since her father died in a mining accident and her mother married gasoline magnate, Shipley Newbold. But when her stepfather’s business acquaintance, Henry Ford, invites the family on one of his famous Vagabonds camping tours, she is forced to face the hills once again—primarily in order to reunite with her future fiancĂ©, owner of the land the Vagabonds are using for their campsite, a man she’s only met once before. It is a veritable arranged marriage, but she prefers it that way. Belle isn’t interested in love. She only wants a simple life—a family of her own and the stability of a wealthy man’s pockets. That’s what Worth Delafield has promised to give her and it’s worth facing the mountains again, the reminder of the past, and her poverty, to secure her future.

 

But when the Vagabonds group is invited to tour the unfinished Grove Park Inn and Belle is unexpectedly thrust into a role researching and writing about the building of the inn—a construction the locals are calling The Eighth Wonder of the World—she quickly realizes that these mountains are no different from the ones she once called home. As Belle peels back the facade of Grove Park Inn, of Worth, of the society she’s come to claim as her own, and the truth of her heart, she begins to see that perhaps her part in Grove Park’s story isn’t a coincidence after all. Perhaps it is only by watching a wonder rise from ordinary hands and mountain stone that she can finally find the strength to piece together the long-destroyed path toward who she was meant to be.

 

International bestselling author Joy Callaway returns with a story of the ordinary people behind extraordinary beauty—and the question of who gets to tell their stories.

 

AUTHOR BIO

 

Joy Callaway is the author of All the Pretty PlacesThe Grand DesignThe Fifth Avenue Artists Society, and Secret Sisters. She holds a BA in journalism and public relations from Marshall University and an MMC from the University of South Carolina. She resides in Charlotte, North Carolina, with her husband, John, and her children, Alevia and John. Visit her online at joycallaway.com.