BLURB:
Raised in a crumbling New England mansion by four women with
personalities as split as a cracked mirror, young Francis Grayson has an
obsessive need to fix them all. There’s his mother, distant and beautiful
Magdalene; his disfigured, suffocating Aunt Stella; his odious grandmother; and
the bane of his existence, his abusive and delusional Aunt Lothian.
For years, Francis plays a tricky game of duck and cover
with the women, turning to music to stay sane. He finds a friend and mentor in
Aidan Madsen, schoolmaster, local Revolutionary War historian, musician and
keeper of the Grayson women’s darkest secrets. In a skillful move by
Fullbright, those secrets are revealed through the viewpoints of three different
people–Aidan, Francis and Francis’stepdaughter, Elyse–adding layers of eloquent
complexity to a story as powerful as it is troubling.
While Francis realizes his dream of forming his own big band
in the 1940s, his success is tempered by the inner monster of his childhood,
one that roars to life when he marries Elyse’s mother. Elyse becomes her
stepfather’s favorite target, and her bitterness becomes entwined with a desire
to know the real Francis Grayson.
For Aidan’s part, his involvement with the Grayson family
only deepens, and secrets carried for a lifetime begin to coalesce as he seeks
to enlighten Francis–and subsequently Elyse–of why the events of so many years
ago matter now. The ugliness of deceit, betrayal and resentment permeates
the narrative, yet there are shining moments of hope, especially in the
relationship between Elyse and her grandfather.
Ultimately, as more of the past filters into the present,
the question becomes: What is the truth, and whose version of the truth is
correct? Fullbright never untangles this conundrum, and it only adds to the
richness of this exemplary novel.—Kirkus
Reviews
EXCERPT:
“I’ll tell you what I’m ready for, Aidan. I’m
ready for the top floor.” His eyebrows shot up.
“I
beg your pardon?”
“The
third floor of Grayson House. I’m ready for it. I’m really ready.”
“I
don’t think I understand—”
“Please,
Aidan.” I emphasized each word: “I’m ready to meet Jamie.”
I
turned and walked out of that parlor then, and into the foyer and up the ten
steps to the landing where the grand staircase turned direction. I ran up the
first flight, then paused at the second landing, waiting for Aidan. When I
glimpsed him behind me, I turned and ran up the next flight, to the third
floor, straight for the door at the end of the hallway, next to the door that
opened onto the outside stairs.
I’d
been able to pinpoint this door as the one by the soft thumps I’d heard when
I’d sneaked into Papa’s room on the second floor—things nobody thought I’d
hear—and by watching from my spot across the road: the quick deliveries and
arrivals, the things and people nobody thought I’d see.
I
hesitated, not feeling anything, I was now so empty. No more anger. Instead I was in tune with senses:
the steady tick-tock of the clock at the end of the otherwise soundless
hallway, the wallpaper’s perfectly vertical stripe, even an aromatic odor
reminiscent of the appendectomy I’d had when I was six—was it ether? And then,
finally, Aidan’s ragged breathing when he caught up with me. We were ready, in position—and it was understood I’d assumed
leadership: I’d go first.
I
turned the doorknob. My opponent had just run through his resources.
REVIEW SOUND BYTES
From
Kirkus Reviews
"Secrets
and lies suffuse generations of one Pennsylvania family . . . in a
skillful move by Fullbright, those secrets are revealed through the
viewpoints of three very different people . . . a superb debut that
exposes the consequences of the choices we make and legacy's sometimes
excruciating embrace."
2012 DISCOVERY AWARD
GLOBAL E-BOOK AWARD NOMINEE
From Midwest Book Review
"A very human story . . . a fine read focusing on the long lasting dysfunction of family."
"There is something fascinating in labyrinthine plot twists, which is what we have here, and I must applaud Fullbright for her keen and magical ability to pull it off with such aplomb."-Norm Goldman, Montreal Books Examiner and Bookpleasures.com
5 Stars ***** Reviewed by Joana James for Readers Favorite: "The Angry Woman Suite is quite a ride . . . very cleverly written . . . an outstanding novel."
Rating: 5.0 stars Reviewed by Anne B. for Readers Favorite:" Lee Fullbright is master of characterization."
Rating: 5.0 stars Reviewed by Alice D. for Readers Favorite: "The Angry Woman Suite is a brilliant, complex, complicated story about talented, complicated people . . . this is a story to remember!"
AUTHOR INFORMATION:
Lee Fullbright, a medical practice consultant in her
non-writing life, lives on San Diego’s beautiful peninsula with her writing
partner, Baby Rae, a 12-year-old rescued Australian cattle dog with
attitude.
The Angry Woman Suite,
a Kirkus Critics’ pick, 5-starred Readers Favorite, and a Discovery Aware
winner, is her first published novel.
LINKS:
GIVEAWAY:
Lee
will be giving away a $50 Amazon gift certificate to one randomly drawn
commenter at the end of the tour.
The
more you comment, the better your chances of winning. The tour dates can be
found here: http://goddessfishpromotions.blogspot.com/2013/02/blurb-blitz-tour-angry-woman-suite-by.html
I'm wondering if you based any of the character traits on people you know?
ReplyDeletemarypres(AT)gmail(DOT)com
Good morning, Mary! Oh yes! Either people I know, or people I watched and would NEVER want to know!
DeleteLOVE watching people, and listening to their stories ... a couple of the incidents in the book (like a scene where one of the three narrators--Francis, as a teen--"skirmishes" with his nutty aunt, Lothian) was inspired by a story I once heard from a friend, which I listened to wide-eyed, as in, Seriously? People really do things like THAT?
My family of origin was very "correct," so almost nothing interested me more than going to friends' homes and observing their families--and, oh, what an education that was--one family especially; I could write a whole book on just their particular craziness....
The character, Papa, is very strongly modeled after my own grandfather, though, and I loved depicting him: wise, caring, funny, philosphical. Have a great day-- hope it's a day off for you, too!
A very human story sounds good to me!
ReplyDeleteshadowrunner1987 at gmail dot com
I'd love your feedback on it, Ami ... hope you're having a good day!
DeleteThank you for hosting today.
ReplyDeleteLee...You mentioned that you didn't have power yesterday in your medical building. Is everything back to normal today? We seem to have more power outages than is the norm at my work (a library). When the computers are down the Library gets eerily quiet...all the students scramble! LOL.
ReplyDeletecatherinelee100 at gmail dot com
Hey there Catherine, Better than normal--I'm not even there today. :) Took the day off (holiday) ... but, yes, regained power yesterday afternoon (which was just a plain weird day). When I was a kid, I wanted to be a librarian. Actually, I just wanted to read all day long (as of that's what librarians actually do!) ... mamy years ago, I was working on a history project (on early SD history), and needed so much research material-- the main San Diego library about blew my socks off, what they were able to dig up for me; stuff I couldn't find anywhere else --and then they delivered it to my branch library! Hard copy! Overnight! Love librarians!
DeleteThank you for hosting me and The Angry Woman Suite!
ReplyDeleteHappy Easter Lee, are you doing something special on the holiday?
ReplyDeletelyra.lucky7ATgmailDOTcom
Happy Easter to you, Lyra! Well, not "special-special." Not like when I was a kid and my mom pulled out all the Easter stops. :)
ReplyDeleteBoth my husband and sister recently passed, ao life is very different right now. Feeling my way. But I will be with people I love and who love me--and, of course, my sweet Baby Rae (dog of all dogs, she owns my heart); all pretty special stuff (and I'm VERY mindful of the blessings I have, and grateful). And there will be lots of food-- and how can anything NOT be special when there's LOTS of food? :) What about you? Something special?
I'm sorry for your loss, I've recently lost my uncle so I know how it is.
DeleteThere is nothing special that I have planed this year, but I will celebrate with my family, lots of good food, my mum is an incredible cook :)
The story sounds very intriguing.
ReplyDeleteKit3247(at)aol(dot)com
I liked the story, not the changing perspectives, but I liked the characters and the writing style, sorry my review on Goodreads is a bit short but you had already quite a few wonderful ones :)
ReplyDeleteHappy Holidays!
Anas
moonsurfer123 at gmail dot com
DeleteYou must be Anasthasia?! (oops, did I spell that right?) I liked that review! Thank you so much for taking the time to read and review, and now follow this tour-- I appreciate you!
DeleteHappy Easter, and best of luck with the book!
ReplyDeletevitajex(at)aol(dot)com
Happy Easter to you, too, and thanks so much for the good wishes!
DeleteSounds very intriguing
ReplyDeletebn100candg at hotmail dot com
It's genuinely very complicated in this busy life to listen news on Television, thus I simply use world wide web for that purpose, and take the most recent news.
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Which two characters from your book would you like to sit down to dinner with??
ReplyDeleteandralynn7 AT gmail dOT com
Hi Andra, Oooh, goood question! I'm a little in love (okay, a lot) with Aidan, so for sure he'd be one. Can I have dinner with him twice?
DeleteAnd, of course, Papa-- love him too, just differently.
Thanks for the chance to win! Really excited now that I've read the excerpt!
ReplyDeleteKate
hense1kk@cmich.edu
Hi Kate-- hope you love the whole book! :) Let me know if you do ... have a nice holiday.
DeleteLee, how has your medical practice experience influenced you?
ReplyDelete