On Publication Day I am delighted to be a part of this Blog Tour
Europa Editions 10 June 2021 My thanks to the publishers and Midas PR for my copy of the book and the invitation to the blog tour |
Violette Toussaint is the caretaker at a cemetery in a small town in Bourgogne. Her daily life is lived to the rhythms of the hilarious and touching confidences of random visitors and her colleagues—three gravediggers, three groundskeepers, and a priest.
Violette Toussaint is the
caretaker of a small cemetery in Bourgogne. There she lovingly tends the graves
and keeps watch over the souls of the departed.
Always ready to give a listening ear to the bereaved or supply cups of tea
and chocolate cake to those in need of bodily sustenance, Violette is so much more
than just a trusted guardian of the dead.
One day, police chief, John Seul,
arrives at the cemetery to enquire if his late mother’s ashes could be buried
alongside a man who was not his father. Entirely used to strange requests from
the public, Violette and John Seul, form a close personal attachment and as
they share the secrets of John’s mother’s clandestine love life so Violette’s
own, rather sad, and at times, tragic life is laid open to scrutiny.
I’m a great believer that a special book finds its reader and Fresh Water for Flowers was everything I needed it to be at this moment in time. It’s wise and gentle, desperately sad and quietly funny, and whilst there are moments of true tragedy, there are also moments of great clarity. Beautifully written and so well translated from the original French that the narrative moves along perfectly seamlessly, sharing wonderful insights into love, friendship, motherhood, bereavement, death and, ultimately, the affirmation of life. I looked forward to each new chapter, and some of them are quite short, but heading each is a wise, and quite profound, piece of poetry, which lifts the spirit.
Quietly melancholic but so beautifully
put together, Fresh Water for Flowers is a lovely, thought-provoking story
which will stay with me for a very long time.
Photo Credit : Valentin Lauvergne |
Hildegarde Serle graduated in French from Oxford University.
After working as a newspaper subeditor in London for many years, she obtained
the Chartered Institute of Linguists Diploma in Translation. She is the
translator of A Winter’s Promise and The Missing of Clair de lune, atmospheric,
absorbing tale.
Social Media
Twitter @Valerieperrin_ #FreshWaterForFlowers
@EuropaEdUK
@midaspr @gabriellamay24
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