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  1 Lost Lake: A Novel
Author: Allen, Sarah Addison
 
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Class: Fiction
Age: Adult
Language: English
LC: PS3601.L
Print Run: 125000
ISBN-13: 9781250019806
LCCN: 2013030138
Imprint: St. Martin's Press
Pub Date: 01/21/2014
Availability: Out of Print Confirmed
List: $25.99
  Hardcover
Physical Description: 296 pages ; 25 cm H 9.48", W 6.43", D 1.04", 1.1 lbs.
LC Series:
Brodart Sources: Brodart's TOP Adult Titles
Bibliographies: New York Times Bestsellers List
New York Times Bestsellers: Adult Fiction
Publishers Weekly Bestsellers
Awards: Booklist Starred Reviews
Starred Reviews: Booklist
TIPS Subjects: Domestic Fiction
Romance
BISAC Subjects: FICTION / Women
FICTION / Magical Realism
LC Subjects: Domestic fiction
FICTION / Contemporary Women
First loves, Fiction
Georgia, Fiction
Love stories
Mothers and daughters, Fiction
Summer resorts, Fiction
Widows, Fiction
SEARS Subjects: Domestic fiction
Georgia, Fiction
Love stories
Mother-daughter relationship, Fiction
Summer resorts, Fiction
Widows, Fiction
Reading Programs:
 
Annotations
Brodart's TOP Adult Titles | 10/01/2013
Nostalgia calls to recently-widowed Kate and her quirky daughter when they return to the place that holds so many happy childhood memories for Kate: Lost Lake Cottages in Sulley, Georgia. With Kate's aunt, the owner, ready to sell and start a new chapter in her life, Kate seeks a way to embrace the magic this place once held and find a way to love again. 304pp., 125K
Starred Reviews:
Booklist | 11/15/2013
Kate has been lingering in a fog throughout the year since her husband died, and it is only when her manipulative mother-in-law threatens to hijack her life that Kate begins to snap to. When her wardrobe-challenged eight-year-old daughter, Devin, discovers an old letter from Kate's great-aunt Eby, the pair go on the lam to Lost Lake, Eby's dilapidated resort camp tucked deep in the south Georgia swamplands. Long widowed, with dwindling funds and a diminishing guest roster, Eby may be forced to sell her fading haven to an unscrupulous developer, until Kate's arrival gives her a new lease on life. While guests and townsfolk prepare a farewell send-off they hope will perversely convince her to stay, Devin receives perplexing clues from the lake's loquacious alligator. One would need a heart of steel, or the skin of an alligator, not to fall in love with Allen's beguiling cast of misfits. A surefire star of feel-good fiction, Allen always manages to nimbly mask her potent messages of inspiration and romance beneath her trademark touches of mirth and magic, but this endearing tale of surprising second chances may just be her wisest work yet. Haggas, Carol. 304p. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2013.
Journal Reviews
Kirkus Reviews | 12/15/2013
Old wrongs are righted for a motley community of Southerners in this latest, semienchanted novel by Allen (The Peach Keeper, 2011, etc.). A year after her husband dies, Kate Pheris wakes up. She was still functioning for that year, still caring for her 8-year-old daughter, Devin, but she was not herself. Shedding her year of slumber, Kate realizes that she has allowed her calculating mother-in-law to take over her and Devin's lives--not a good thing for two free spirits--so they flee to Lost Lake in rural Georgia, the place Kate had her "last best summer" when she was 12. Lost Lake is owned by Kate's great-aunt Eby, one of the few women wise enough to escape their family curse: marrying poor men then falling apart completely when the men die young. Eby lived a long, happy life running the modest resort with her husband, George, but George passed away, and now Eby plans to sell the property and move on, much to the chagrin of her few remaining regulars and her best friend and resort cook, Lisette. All gather to celebrate one last summer with Eby, secretly hoping to convince her not to sell. Along the way, we get back stories of the patrons: Bulahdeen, old and plainspoken; Selma, the man-eater looking for her eighth husband; Jack, who is in love with Lisette; and Wes, the boy Kate spent her last best summer with, now grown. Tragic pasts abound--the body count alone is impressive--and each lakegoer is haunted to a different extent. It's clear from the beginning that healing is on the horizon for everyone. Light, sweet and sparkly. 304pg. KIRKUS MEDIA LLC, c2013.
Library Journal | 11/15/2013
A year after her husband's death, Kate emerges from the fog of grief just in time to make one seemingly simple choice that changes everything. Upon finding a decades-old postcard from her Great Aunt Eby hidden in the attic, Kate and her eight-year-old daughter Devin leave the confines of Atlanta to explore Lost Lake in Suley, GA, and oh the adventures they have! A collection of quirky characters, all with wisdom to share, bring this story to life, and none shy away from the chance for even greater personal growth. But the star of this show might be its geographical sweet spot. Soon after the first page, readers will want to release their cares and woes for full immersion in this novel's magical setting. Who wouldn't want to spend time in one of the relaxing cabins, dine by the lake, and enjoy the unique fellowship found around this campsite? VERDICT A favorite author (Garden Spells; The Peach Keeper) has returned with a solid novel that reads so quickly it will leave fans wishing for more, more, more! [See Prepub Alert, 8/5/13; 125,000-copy first printing; library marketing.]. Stacey Hayman, Rocky River P.L., OH. 304p. LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2013.
Library Journal Prepub Alert | 08/05/2013
Allen offers her own brand of magic in books like Garden Spells and The Peach Keepers and always gets on the New York Times best sellers list. Here she sends newly widowed Kate to Lost Lake Cottages in Suley, GA, looking for some magic for herself and young daughter Devin. Kate once spent a lovely summer at Lost Lake and thinks that returning may give her a chance to heal, but at first it seems that time has marched on. The past, however, manages to emerge in unexpected and joyous ways. Big promotion, big interest, and the in-house opinion that this book is stellar. 304p. LJ Prepub Alert Online Review. LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2013.
Publishers Weekly | 10/14/2013
In Allen's (Garden Spells) atmospheric fifth novel, a widow and her daughter find healing at a quirky summer resort. For the year following her husband's sudden death, Kate Pheris sleepwalked through life, barely able to care for her eight-year-old daughter, Devin. Kate's overbearing mother-in-law, Cricket, stepped in, selling Kate's house and arranging for Kate and Devin to come live with her. On moving day, Kate unearths a postcard from Lost Lake, a resort in Suley, Ga., where her great-aunt Eby owned a group of rental cabins. More than that, it was where Kate spent her "last best summer." Finding the postcard wakes her up. On a whim, Kate decides to take a detour to Suley with Devin, having no idea whether Eby and the cabins will even still be there. They are--Eby's decided to open the cabins for a handful of her regulars for one final summer before selling to a real estate developer. Kate and Devin are immediately taken with Lost Lake and Eby's guests, an assortment of oddballs and misfits. When a magical alligator directs Devin to a treasure box submerged in the lake, it sets off a chain of events that uncovers 15-year-old secrets and cements Kate and Devin's ties to the resort. The overused family business-versus-developers trope doesn't particularly add to the story, and Allen's trademark mystical touches are not as effective as usual, but her eccentric cast of characters and charming Southern setting will win readers over. Announced first printing of 125,000. (Feb.). 304p. PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, c2013.
9781250019806,dl.it[0].title