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  1 LEMON ORCHARD
Author: Rice, Luanne
 
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Class: Fiction
Age: Adult
Language: English
LC: PS3568
Print Run: 75000
ISBN-13: 9780670025275
LCCN: 2013009690
Imprint: Pamela Dorman Books
Publisher: Viking
Pub Date: 07/02/2013
Availability: Out of Print Confirmed
List: $27.95
  Hardcover
Physical Description: xii, 286 pages ; 24 cm H 9.25", W 6.35", D 1.05", 1.1 lbs.
LC Series:
Brodart Sources: Brodart's Blockbuster List
Brodart's Insight Catalog: Adult
Brodart's TOP Adult Titles
Bibliographies: Fiction Core Collection, 18th ed.
Fiction Core Collection, 19th ed.
Fiction Core Collection, 20th ed.
Library Journal Bestsellers
Awards:
Starred Reviews:
TIPS Subjects: Romance
BISAC Subjects: FICTION / Romance / General
FICTION / Family Life / General
FICTION / Romance / Contemporary
LC Subjects: Bereavement, Fiction
California, Southern, Fiction
Love stories
Separation (Psychology), Fiction
SEARS Subjects: Bereavement, Fiction
California, Fiction
Loss (Psychology), Fiction
Love stories
Reading Programs:
 
Annotations
Brodart's TOP Adult Titles | 02/01/2013
Her daughter is dead; his daughter is missing. Julia heads for Malibu to do some house sitting and mourn her daughter in peace when she meets a lemon orchard worker still clinging to the hope of finding his missing daughter. 304pp., 75K, Auth res: New York City; Southern CA
Journal Reviews
Booklist | 06/01/2013
Trust Rice (Little Night, 2012), known for fiction that explores the power of family, to find the humanity in illegal immigration, a topic too often relegated to rhetoric and statistics. The story centers on Julia and Roberto, both of whom have suffered the loss of a daughter. Julia's was killed in a car accident. Roberto's little girl went missing as the pair crossed into the U.S. from Mexico--a trek through punishing desert that Rice depicts with visceral, heartbreaking brutality. The pair meet at the Malibu home of Julia's aunt and uncle, where Julia is housesitting and Roberto oversees the titular orchard. An unlikely friendship forms between the two, a bond born out of shared grief, which eventually grows into a tender romance. Though Rice acknowledges the cultural chasm between her lovers, she also imbues her characters with uncommon kindness and understanding. Initially weighed down with exposition, Rice's novel picks up steam as Julia takes up the search for Roberto's daughter. An unexpected plot turn will leave readers begging for a sequel. Wetli, Patty. 304p. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2013.
Kirkus Reviews | 06/15/2013
Five years after the death of her daughter, Julia comes to Malibu to house-sit and is drawn to the overseer of the orchard property, an illegal immigrant who has his own tragic past. When Julia's aunt and uncle ask her to stay in their Malibu home while they travel to Ireland for a research project, she welcomes the opportunity. Tucked into the Santa Monica Mountains with its lemon grove and views of the sea, the Malibu property has been a sanctuary for Julia her whole life, so different from her starchy, academic East Coast upbringing. Now it serves as a different kind of refuge--an escape from the memories of her daughter that are so entwined with the New England home she can't bear to move out of yet can't seem to move forward in either. Hiking the area woods and through the property, Julia runs into the handsome overseer, Roberto, and finds herself drawn to him in a way she doesn't understand, until she realizes he has lost a daughter, too, during their arduous and dangerous trek from Mexico into the U.S. As the story unfolds, the arresting tale of Roberto's loss wakes Julia up from the apathy she's experienced since Jenny's death, and, with her background as an anthropologist, she'll delve into the moving plight of immigrants from Latin America as a whole and Roberto's heart-wrenching experience in particular, while putting together the pieces of a puzzling mystery that may ultimately tear her from the first person to touch her heart since the day she lost her daughter. Rice here takes her signature themes of family and loss into the difficult and enigmatic landscape of illegal immigration to powerful effect (though readers may question the likelihood of the romantic elements of the storyline). An engaging and texturizing Southern California backdrop also subtly spotlights the struggle of land development and the environment as well as the fairy-tale atmosphere of Hollywood, and the book seamlessly includes details and plot points that both ground and enrich the story through its setting. Lovely and compelling, with quiet yet brave social commentary that enhances the book's impact. 304pg. KIRKUS MEDIA LLC, c2013.
Library Journal Prepub Alert | 12/03/2012
House-sitting for her aunt and uncle in Malibu, with only her dog for company, Julia seeks solitude so that she can quietly mourn her daughter's death. Then she befriends Roberto, who tends the nearby lemon orchard and has sorrows of his own: his daughter has disappeared, but he has yet to give up hope. Classic Rice and doubtless another best seller. 352p. LJ Prepub Alert Online Review. LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2012.
Publishers Weekly | 06/03/2013
Still devastated by grief five years after the death of her husband and teenage daughter in a car accident, Julia hopes to find solitude and solace while house-sitting at her aunt and uncle's California estate. Amid the lush landscapes and lemon groves of Malibu, Julia does find these things--in addition to an unexpected relationship with Roberto, who oversees the estate. Roberto, an undocumented immigrant, connects with Julia over her loss: he became separated from his young daughter during their crossing from Mexico and believes her to be dead. Julia, an anthropologist specializing in movements and migrations, thinks that the little girl is still alive and sets out to find her--even if doing so means potentially losing Roberto. The plot alternates from an initially tepid pace to moments of intensity--as when the estate is threatened--that seem largely irrelevant to the developing narrative. Nevertheless, Rice's fans will appreciate the evocative setting and unconventional romance, as well as the harrowing, if familiar, depictions of border crossing and the fascinating parallels drawn between Julia's research interests (she studies the Irish who arrived in America over a century ago) and modern-day Mexican immigrants. Agent: Andrea Cirillo, Jane Rotrosen Agency. (July). 283p. PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, c2013.
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