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   Book Info

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Sweet Hush  
Author: Deborah Smith
ISBN: 0641616406
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review
Sweet Hush

FROM THE PUBLISHER

The sorrows and secrets of Hush McGillen's life are as deeply rooted as the famed Sweet Hush apple orchards her family has tended for more than a century. As a devoted mother, young widow, and successful business-woman, Hush has worked hard to restore her family's farming fortunes. At the same time, she has tried to hide the truth about her late husband and their tormented marriage from her son, Davis. Now, Davis suddenly returns home from college to tell his mother he has eloped with a fellow student, and to Hush's horror, the eyes of the entire world turn to her family and her private, guarded life-because her son's new wife is the rebellious daughter of the President of the United States. Delivering the warmth, humor, and unforgettable characters that her millions of readers have come to expect, Deborah Smith gives us a passionate, page-turning story about a surprising, unexpected love.

Author Biography: Deborah Smith has written seven other

contemporary novels, including "A Place to Call Home," "On Bear Mountain," and "The Stone Flower Garden." She is married and lives in the mountains of northern Georgia.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

An apple orchard provides the atmospheric background for Smith's (A Place to Call Home) ninth novel, but a farfetched romance reduces it to hijinks. Hush McGillen introduces her family's apple farming history in the mountains of Georgia, where they raise a renowned hybrid apple, the Sweet Hush. Hush has been involved with the orchard since her father died when she was 12. She assumed responsibilities for the business as well as for her little brother, Logan, after her mother died when Hush was 16, the same year she fell pregnant and married race car driver and womanizer Davy Thackery. Davy isn't responsible, but he is a loving father to his son Davis, and proud of Hush as she builds her orchard into a multimillion dollar industry. After Davy's death in a car accident, the story jumps 23 years forward to when Davis brings home Edwina "Eddie" Jacobs, a fellow Harvard student and the daughter of the president of the United States. History has repeated itself; Eddie is pregnant, and the couple has fled to the orchard to elude Eddie's surveillance team of Secret Service agents. Hush battles with the irate First Lady over how to handle the situation. She also meets the president's nephew, Nick Jabokek, a weapons specialist, who alternates narration with Hush and falls for the apple magnate. In contrast to Hush's salty, humorous language ("I would rather eat dirt and shit roots first"), Nick's voice is that of a clich d tough guy: "I slept with the kind of women who moved fast and left damage behind." Together, they try to prevent the unwelcome barrage of negative publicity from revealing buried family secrets. Although the plot is implausible, Hush McGillen's voice is rich enough to keep the reader hooked. (Feb. 18) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

"Sweet Hush" is an heirloom apple variety grown in the Georgia mountains for five generations. Hush McGillen Thackery, named for the ancestor who also gave her name to the fruit, got pregnant and married at 16. Widowed when her womanizing husband died in a race car wreck, she has overseen the development of the McGillen Orchards from a family farm into a multi-million-dollar enterprise. Now 41, Hush has high hopes for her son, Davis, who is a junior at Harvard, but she's shocked and disappointed when he comes home midterm with his pregnant girlfriend, Edwina "Eddie" Jacobs. Because Eddie's father happens to be the President of the United States, she brings with her the Secret Service, a great deal of media attention, and a protector-her cousin Nick, a former Army special op. Romance between Hush and Nick is inevitable, though the telling of it is (thankfully) less steamy than it might be. The dual, gender-specific narration by William Dufris and Laurel Lefkow requires Southern, Midwestern, and Polish accents. It takes a cassette length to get accustomed to the constant switching of voices, but by that time the listener is already caught up in the story. Though the plot and the ending are predictable, this program is a pleasant romance that's hard to put down (or switch off).-Nann Blaine Hilyard, Zion-Benton P.L., IL Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

     



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