Sara's Reviews > Cold Sassy Tree
Cold Sassy Tree
by
by
Sara's review
bookshelves: american, historical-fiction, southern-lit, borrowed-from-library
Jul 17, 2020
bookshelves: american, historical-fiction, southern-lit, borrowed-from-library
3.5 stars, rounded down.
Miss Mattie Lou is dead and her husband, Rucker Blakeslee, waits only three weeks before marrying the milliner who works at his store, Miss Love Simpson. The rest of the novel deals with the repercussions of this marriage, the development of the relationships between the new bride and the family, and the way this new view of his grandfather affects his grandson, Will.
I am generally fond of coming-of-age stories, and felt the story gained something from having the young Will as narrator. However, I felt his involvement in his grandfather’s intimate life highly unlikely for this time period, so some of it was a stretch for me. I know that the kind of adult conversations he was privy to, even those overheard lurking behind doors, would never have happened in my own childhood.
I felt we were meant to admire Rucker and find him entertaining, but at times I found him very distasteful in his dealings with his family members, particularly the son-in-law, Camp, who worked at his store. What was meant to be blunt and frank, often came across to me as crass and unfeeling. Sadly, I saw some of the same behavior developing in the grandson, whose pranks failed to make me smile because there was a kind of cruelty in them.
What I enjoyed about Cold Sassy Tree was the flavor of the South as it once was that was captured here and there. I recognized the small Southern town (Commerce, Georgia was much as described even when I was young), the railroad tracks that defined so many small towns in the South, and the descriptions of the Mill Town (my aunt lived in one and even though the mill had long been closed, the houses were the same small simple cubes with four rooms that opened into one another and a bathroom at the back).
The story began well, had a period of drag for me about midway, and then scuttled along to the end. I felt a bit conflicted when I finished, because while it might have been a good story, it was sort of meaningless. I couldn’t really think of any deeper meaning or anything any of these characters had learned that would have moved them forward, including Will. For me, that is one of the things that make a coming-of-age story work, that the narrator is generally wiser and more mature at the end than in the beginning...that some event has happened that has genuinely changed his understanding of life. I did not find that to be true at the end of this novel. I felt the Will we met in the first chapter was the same Will we said goodbye to on the last page.
Miss Mattie Lou is dead and her husband, Rucker Blakeslee, waits only three weeks before marrying the milliner who works at his store, Miss Love Simpson. The rest of the novel deals with the repercussions of this marriage, the development of the relationships between the new bride and the family, and the way this new view of his grandfather affects his grandson, Will.
I am generally fond of coming-of-age stories, and felt the story gained something from having the young Will as narrator. However, I felt his involvement in his grandfather’s intimate life highly unlikely for this time period, so some of it was a stretch for me. I know that the kind of adult conversations he was privy to, even those overheard lurking behind doors, would never have happened in my own childhood.
I felt we were meant to admire Rucker and find him entertaining, but at times I found him very distasteful in his dealings with his family members, particularly the son-in-law, Camp, who worked at his store. What was meant to be blunt and frank, often came across to me as crass and unfeeling. Sadly, I saw some of the same behavior developing in the grandson, whose pranks failed to make me smile because there was a kind of cruelty in them.
What I enjoyed about Cold Sassy Tree was the flavor of the South as it once was that was captured here and there. I recognized the small Southern town (Commerce, Georgia was much as described even when I was young), the railroad tracks that defined so many small towns in the South, and the descriptions of the Mill Town (my aunt lived in one and even though the mill had long been closed, the houses were the same small simple cubes with four rooms that opened into one another and a bathroom at the back).
The story began well, had a period of drag for me about midway, and then scuttled along to the end. I felt a bit conflicted when I finished, because while it might have been a good story, it was sort of meaningless. I couldn’t really think of any deeper meaning or anything any of these characters had learned that would have moved them forward, including Will. For me, that is one of the things that make a coming-of-age story work, that the narrator is generally wiser and more mature at the end than in the beginning...that some event has happened that has genuinely changed his understanding of life. I did not find that to be true at the end of this novel. I felt the Will we met in the first chapter was the same Will we said goodbye to on the last page.
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Reading Progress
July 14, 2020
–
Started Reading
July 14, 2020
– Shelved
July 14, 2020
–
0.0%
"Not even sure I want to read this one, but I have it from the library and it has been on my list for years. So, I've decided to give it a go."
page
0
July 17, 2020
– Shelved as:
american
July 17, 2020
– Shelved as:
historical-fiction
July 17, 2020
– Shelved as:
southern-lit
July 17, 2020
– Shelved as:
borrowed-from-library
July 18, 2020
–
Finished Reading
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by
Claire
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Jul 17, 2020 09:37PM
This book was recently recommended to me, so I bought it but haven't started reading it. Fortuitous to see your review!
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I knew there was a reason why I have put off reading this book. Guess I don't need to bother now at all. Terrific review.
Claire wrote: "This book was recently recommended to me, so I bought it but haven't started reading it. Fortuitous to see your review!"It has been on my TBR for too many years to count. It wasn't bad, it just lacked some things I had wanted to find there. I will say it suffered from being read on the heels of The Tall Woman and A Cry of Angels. I imagine if I had read it first it might have gotten a slightly higher rating.
Anne wrote: "I knew there was a reason why I have put off reading this book. Guess I don't need to bother now at all. Terrific review."Thanks, Anne. I wouldn't say "don't read it" just "don't hurry".
A terrific review, Sara, but if you don't rate something at least a 4, I'm likely to put this off for a long time. Especially when it comes to southern lit, I really pay close attention to what you and Diane have to say. :)
I had read Diane's review as well, Candi, and I knew I wasn't likely to fall in love with this one. I already had it from the library, though, and on the TBR since 2011 (when I joined GR), so thought I ought to just go ahead and read it. I'm glad I did. It wasn't bad and now I know; but I'm always searching for the 5-star reads, so there are a million other Southern Lit books I should have/could have chosen instead.
You review spelled out my feelings exactly. Some books are nice to "have read", just so you can get them out of your mind and not have to think about them again.

