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Tag Archives: The Clover Girls

Spotlight – The Clover Girls

20 Thursday May 2021

Posted by romanticreadsandsuch in Blog Tour, Sneak Peek

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The Clover Girls, Viola Shipman

As comforting and familiar as a favorite sweater, Viola Shipman’s novels never fail to deliver a heartfelt story of friendship and familty, encapsulating summer memories in every page. Fans of Dorthea Benton Frank and Nancy Thayer will love this new story about three childhood friends approaching middle age, determined to rediscover the dreams that made them special as campers in 1985.

*****

The Clover Girls

by Viola Shipman

ISBN: 9781525896002

Publication Date:ย  May 18, 2021

Publisher: Graydon House

Blurb:

Elizabeth, Veronica, Rachel and Emily met at Camp Birchwood as girls in 1985, where they called themselves The Clover Girls (after their cabin name). The years following that magical summer pulled them in very different directions and, now approaching middle age, the women are facing new challenges: the inevitable physical changes that come with aging, feeling invisible to society, disinterested husbands, surley teens, and losing their sense of self.

Then, Elizabeth, Veronica and Rachel each receive a letter from Emily โ€“ she has cancer and, knowing itโ€™s terminal, reaches out to the girls who were her best friends once upon a time and implores them to reunite at Camp Birchwood to scatter her ashes. When the three meet at the property for the first time in what feels like a lifetime, another letter from Emily awaits, explaining that she has purchased the abandoned camp, and now it belongs to them โ€“ at Emilyโ€™s urging, they must spend a week together remembering the dreams theyโ€™d put aside, and find a way to become the women they always swore theyโ€™d grow up to be. Through flashbacks to their youthful summer, we see the four friends then and now, rebuilding their lives, flipping a middle finger to society’s disdain for aging women, and with a renewed purpose to find themselves again.

Harlequin |ย Indiebound |ย Amazon |ย Barnes & Noble |ย Books-A-Million
Target |ย Walmart |ย Google |ย iBooks |ย Kobo

*****

Excerpt:

SUMMER 2021

VERONICA

Grocery List

Milk (Oat, coconut, soy)

Fizzy water (cherry, lime, watermelon, mixed berry)

Chips (lentil, quinoa, kale, beet)

Cereal (Kashi, steel-cut oats, NO GMOs! VERY IMPORTANT!)

Whatever happened to one kind of milk from a cow, one kind of water from a faucet and one kind of chip from a potato?

My teenage children are seated on opposite ends of the massive, modern, original Milo Baughman circular sofa that David and I ordered for our new midcentury house in Los Angeles. Ashley and Tyler are juggling drinks while pecking at their cells, and it takes every fiber of my soul not to come unglued. This is the most expensive piece of furniture I have ever purchased in my life. More expensive even than my first two years of college tuition plus my first car, a red Reliant K-car that would stall at stoplights.

I still donโ€™t know what the K stood for, I think. Krappy?

That was a time, long ago, when that type of negative thought would never have entered my mind, when the K would have stood only for Konfident, Kool or Kick-Ass. But that was a different world, another time, another life and place.

Another me.

Another V.

I steady my pen at the top of a pad of paper emblazoned with the logo of my husbandโ€™s architectural firm, David Berzini & Associates.

Los Angeles is the latest stop for us. My family has hopscotched the world more than a military brat as Davidโ€™s architectural career has exploded. He is now one of the worldโ€™s preeminent architects. David studied under and worked with some of the most famous midcentury modern architectsโ€”Albert Frey, William Krisel, Donald Wexlerโ€”and has now taken over their mantles, especially as the appreciation for and popularity of midcentury modern architecture has grown. Now he is working on a stunning new public library in LA that will be his legacy.

I glance up from my pad. A selection of magazinesโ€”Architectural Digest, Vogue, Wโ€”are artfully strewn across a brutalist coffee table. The beautiful models stare back at me.

That was my legacy.

โ€œMom, can I get something to eat?โ€ย 

This is now my legacy.

I glance at my children. Everything old has come back en vogue. Ashley is wearing the same sort of high-waisted jeans that I once wore and modeled in the โ€™80s, and Tylerโ€™s hairโ€”razored high by a barber and slicked back into a big black pompadourโ€”looks a lot like a style I sported for a Robert Palmer video when every woman wanted to look like a Nagel woman.

Yes, everything has made a comeback.

Except me.

I look at my list.

And carbs.

My kids, like my husband, have never met a Pop-Tart, a box of Capโ€™n Crunch, a Jenoโ€™s Pizza Roll or a Ding Dong. My entire family resembles long-limbed ponies, ready to race. I grew up when the foundation of a food pyramid was a Twinkie.

I again put pen to paper, and in my own secret code I write the letter L above the first letter of my husbandโ€™s name. If someone happened to glance at the paper, they would simply think I had been doodling. But I know what โ€œLDโ€ means, and it will remind me once I get to the store.

Little Debbies.

You know, I actually hide these around our new home, which isnโ€™t easy since the entire space is so sleek and minimal, and hiding space is at a premium. It took a lot of effort, but I, too, used to be as sleek and minimal as this house, as angular and arresting as its architecture. Anything out of place in our butterfly-roofed home located in the Bird Streets high above Sunset Stripโ€”where the streets are named after orioles and nightingales, and Hollywood stars resideโ€”is conspicuous.ย 

Even now, on yet another perfect day in LA, where the sunshine makes everything look lazily beautiful and dipped in glitter, I can see a layer of dust on the terrazzo floors. Although a maid comes twice a week, the dust, smog and ash from nonstop fires in LAโ€”carried by hot, dry Santa Ana windsโ€”coat everything. And David notices everything.

Swiffers, I write on the pad, before outlining โ€œLDโ€ with my pen.

David hates that I have gained weight. He is embarrassed I have gained weight.

Or is just my imagination? Am I the one who is embarrassed by who Iโ€™ve become?

David never says anything to me, but he attends more and more galas alone, saying I need to watch the kids even though they no longer need a babysitter and that itโ€™s better for their stability if one parent is with them. But I know the truth.

What did he expect would happen to my body after two children and endless moves? What did he expect would happen after losing my career, identity and self-esteem? Itโ€™s so ironic, because Iโ€™m not angry at him or my life. Iโ€™m justโ€ฆ

โ€œWhy donโ€™t you just put all of that in the notes on your phone?โ€

โ€œOr just ask the refrigerator to remember?โ€

โ€œYeah, Mom,โ€ my kids say at the same time.

I look over at them. They have my beauty and Davidโ€™s drive. Ash and Ty lift their eyes from their phones just long enough to roll their eyes at me, in that way that teens do, the way teens always have, in that there-couldnโ€™t-be-a-more-lame-uncool-human-in-the-world-than-you-Mom way. And itโ€™s always followed by โ€œthe sigh.โ€

โ€œI like to do it this way,โ€ I say.ย 

โ€œNO ONE writes anything anymore,โ€ Ashley says.

โ€œNO ONE, Mom!โ€ Tyler echoes.

โ€œCursive is dead, Mom,โ€ Ashley says. โ€œGet with the times.โ€

I stare at my children. They are often the sweetest kids in the world, but every so often their evil twins emerge, the ones with forked tongues and acerbic words.

Did they get that from me? Or their father? Or is it just the way kids are today?

The sun shifts, and the reflection of water from the pool dances on the white walls, making it look as if we are living in an aquarium. I glance down the long hallway where the pool is reflecting, the place David has allowed me to have my only โ€œclutterโ€: a corridor of old photos, a room of heirlooms.

My life flashes before me: our family in front of the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree in New York at the holidays, eating colorful French macarons at a cafรฉ in Paris, lying out on Barcelonaโ€™s beaches, and fishing with my parents at their summer cottage on Lake Michigan. And then, in the ultimate juxtaposition, there is an old photo of me, teenage me, in a bikini at Lake Birchwood hanging directly next to an old Sports Illustrated cover of me. In it, I am posing by the ocean where I met David. I am crouched on the beach like a tiger ready to pounce. That was my signature pose, you know, the one I invented that all the other models stole, the Tiger Pose.

I was one of the one-name girls back then: Madonna, Iman, Cher, V. All I needed was a single letter to identify myself. Now V has Vanished. I have one name.

โ€œMom!โ€

โ€œLunch. Please!โ€

My eyes wander back to our pool. I would be mortified to wear a bikini today. I am not what most people would deem overweight. But I have a paunch, my thighs are jellied and my chin is starting to have a best friend. It was that photo in all of the gossip magazines a year or so ago that did it to me. Paparazzi shot me downing an ice cream cone while putting gas in my car. I had shuttled the kids around all day in 110-degree heat, and I was wearing a billowy caftan. I looked bigger than my SUV. And the headlines:

Voluminous!

V has Vanished Inside This Woman!

If you saw me in person, youโ€™d likely say Iโ€™m a narcissist or being way too hard on myself, but itโ€™s as hard to hide fifteen pounds in LA as it is to hide an extra throw pillow in this house. I get Botox and fillers and do all the things I can to maintain my looks, but I am terrified to go to the gym here. I am mortified to look for a dress in a city where a size two is considered obese. The gossip rags are just waiting for me to move.

My eyes wander back to the photos.

I no longer have an identity.

I no longer have friends.

โ€œEarth to Mom? Can you make me some lunch?โ€ Tyler looks at me. โ€œThen I need to go to Justinโ€™s.โ€

โ€œAnd you have to drive me to Lilyโ€™s at four, remember?โ€

I shudder. A two-mile drive in LA takes two hours.

โ€œMom?โ€

Ashley looks at me.

There is a way that your children and husband look at youโ€”or rather donโ€™t look at you at a certain point in your lifeโ€”not to mention kids in the street, young women shopping, men in restaurants, Davidโ€™s colleagues, happy families in the grocery.ย 

They look through you. Like youโ€™re a window.

Itโ€™s as if women over forty were never young, smart, fashionable, coolโ€ฆwere never like them, never had hopes, dreams and acres of life ahead of them.

What is with American society today?

Why, when women reach a โ€œcertain age,โ€ do we become ghosts? Strike that. Thatโ€™s not an accurate analogy: that would imply that we actually invoke a mood, a scare, a feeling of some sort. That we have a personality. I could once hold up a bag of potato chips, eat one, lick my fingers and sell a million bags of junk food for a company. Now Iโ€™m not even memorable enough to be a ghost. This model has become a prop. A piece of furniture. Not like the stylish one my kids are stretched out on, but the reliable, sturdy, ever-present, department store kind, devoid of any depth or substance, one without feeling, attractiveness or sexuality. I am just here. Like the air. Necessary to survive, but something no one sees or notices.

I used to be noticed. I used to be seen. Desired. Admired. Wanted.

I was the ringleader of friends, the one who called the shots. Now, I am Uber driver, Shipt delivery, human Roomba and in-home Grubhub, products I once would have sold rather than used.

I take a deep breath and note a few more grocery items on my antiquated written list and stand to make my kids lunch.

They are teen health nuts, already obsessed with every bite they consume. Does it have GMOs? What is the protein-to-carb differential?

Did I do this to them? I donโ€™t think so.

Even as a model, I ate pizza, but thatโ€™s back in the day when a curve was sexy and a bikini needed to be filled out. I pull out some spicy tuna sushi rolls I picked up at Gelsonโ€™s and arrange them on a platter. I wash and chop some berries and place them in a bowl. I watch my kids fill their plates. Ashley is a cheerleader and wannabe actress, and Tyler is a skateboarding, creative techy applying to UCLA to study film and directing. Ashley wants to go to Northwestern to major in drama. They will both be going to specialty camps later this summer, Ashley for cheerleading and acting, Tyler for filmmaking and to boost his SAT scores. My eyes drift back to my photo wall, and I smile. They will not, however, spend their days simply having fun, singing camp songs, engaging in color wars, shooting archery, splashing in a cold lake, roasting marshmallows and making friends. A kidโ€™s life today, especially here in LA, is a competition, and the competition starts early.

There is a rustling noise outside, and Ashley tosses her plate onto the sofa and rushes to the door. In LA, even the postal workers are hot, literally and figuratively, and our mailman looks like Zac Efron. She returns a few seconds later, fanning herself dramatically with the mail.

โ€œYouโ€™re going to be a great actress,โ€ I say with a laugh. Ashley starts to toss the mail onto the counter, but I stop her. โ€œLeave the mail in the organizer for your dad.โ€

Yes, even the mail has its own home in our home.

โ€œHey, you got a letter,โ€ she says.

โ€œWho writes letters anymore?โ€ Tyler asks.

โ€œOld people,โ€ Ashley says. The two laugh.

I take a seat at the original Saarinen tulip table and study the envelope. There is no return address. I feel the envelope. Itโ€™s bulky. I open it and begin to read a handwritten letter:ย 

Dear V:

How are you? Iโ€™m sorry itโ€™s been a while since weโ€™ve talked. Youโ€™ve been busy, Iโ€™ve been busy. Remember when we were just a bunk away? We could lean our heads over the side and share our darkest secrets. Those were the good olโ€™ days, werenโ€™t they? When we were innocent. When we were as tight as the clover that grew together in the patch that wound to the lake.

How long has it been since you talked to Rach and Liz? Over 30 years? I guess that first four-leaf clover I found wasnโ€™t so lucky after all, was it? Oh, you and Rach have had such success, but are you happy, V? Deep down? Achingly happy? I donโ€™t believe in my heart that you are. I donโ€™t think Rach and Liz are either. How do I know? Friendโ€™s intuition.

I used to hate myself for telling everyone what happened our last summer together. It was like dominoes falling after that, one secret after the next revealed, the facade of our friendship ripped apart, just like tearing the fourth leaf off that clover I still have pressed in my scrapbook. But I hate secrets. They only tear us apart. Keep us from becoming who we need to become. The dark keeps things from growing. The light is what creates the clover.

Out the cabin door went all of our luck, and thenโ€”leaf by leafโ€”our faith in each other, followed by any hope we might have had in our friendship and, finally, any love that remained was replaced by hatred, then a dull ache, and then nothing at all. Thatโ€™s the worst thing, isnโ€™t it, V? To feel nothing at all?

Much of my life has been filled with regret, and thatโ€™s just an awful way to live. Iโ€™m trying to make amends for that before itโ€™s too late. Iโ€™m trying to be the friend I should have been. I was once the glue that held us all together. Then I was scissors that tore us all apart. Arenโ€™t friends supposed to be there for one another, no matter what? You werenโ€™t just beautiful, V, you were confident, so funny and full of life. More than anything, you radiated light, like the lake at sunset. And thatโ€™s how I will always remember you.

Iโ€™ve sent similar letters to Rach and Liz. I stayed in touch with Lizโ€ฆand Rachโ€ฆwell, you know Rach. For some reason, you all forgave me, but not each other. I guess because I was just an innocent bystander to all the hurt. My only remaining hope is that you will all forgive one another at some point, because you changed my life and you changed each otherโ€™s lives. And I know that you all need one another now more than ever. We found each other for a reason. We need to find each other again.

Let me get to the point, dear V. Just picture me leaning my head over the bunk and telling you my deepest secret.

By the time you receive this, Iโ€™ll be deadโ€ฆ

My hand begins to shake, which releases the contents still remaining in the envelope. A pressed four-leaf clover and a few old Polaroid pictures scatter onto the tabletop. Without warning, I groan.

โ€œAre you okay, Mom?โ€ Tyler asks without looking back.

โ€œWhoโ€™s that from?โ€ Ashley asks, still staring at her phone.

โ€œA friend,โ€ I manage to mumble.

โ€œCool,โ€ Ashley says. โ€œYou need friends. You donโ€™t have any except for that one girl from camp.โ€ She stops. โ€œEmily, right?โ€

The photos lying on the marble tabletop are of the four of us at camp, laughing, singing, holding hands. We are so, so young, and I wonder what happened to the girls we used to be. I stare at a photo of Em and me lying under a camp blanket in the same bunk. Thatโ€™s when I realize the photo is sitting on top of something. I move the picture and smile.ย 

A friendship pin stares at me, E-V-E-R shining in a sea of green beads.

I look up, and water is reflecting through the clerestory windows of our home, and suddenly every one of those little openings is like a scrapbook to my life, and I can see it flashโ€”at camp and afterโ€”in front of me in bursts of light.

Why did I betray my friends?

Why did I give up my identity so easily?

Why am I richer than I ever dreamed and yet feel so empty and lost?

Oh, Em.

I blink, my eyes blur, and thatโ€™s when I realize itโ€™s not the pool reflecting in the windows, itโ€™s my own tears. Iโ€™m crying. And I cannot stop.

Suddenly, I stand, throw open the patio doors and jump into the pool, screaming as I sink. I look up, and my children are yelling.

โ€œMom! Are you okay?โ€

I wave at them, and their bodies relax.

โ€œIโ€™m fine,โ€ I lie when I come to the surface. โ€œIโ€™m sorry. I didnโ€™t mean to scare you.โ€

They look at each other and shrug, before heading back inside.

At least, I think, they finally see me.

I take a deep breath and go down once more. Underwater, I can hear my heart drum loudly in my ears. Itโ€™s drumming in such perfect rhythm that I know immediately the tune my soul is playing. I can hear it as if it were just yesterday.

Boom, didi, boom, boomโ€ฆ Booooom.

Excerpted from The Clover Girls by Viola Shipman,
Copyright ยฉ 2021 by Viola Shipman. Published by Graydon House Books.

*****

Author Info:

Viola Shipman is the pen name for Wade Rouse, a popular, award-winning memoirist. Rouse chose his grandmother’s name, Viola Shipman, to honor the woman whose heirlooms and family stories inspire his writing. Rouse is the author ofย The Summer Cottage, as well asย The Charm Braceletย andย The Hope Chestย which have been translated into more than a dozen languages and become international bestsellers. He lives in Saugatuck, Michigan and Palm Springs, California, and has written forย People,ย Coastal Living,ย Good Housekeeping, andย Taste of Home, along with other publications, and is a contributor toย All Things Considered.

Author Website: https://www.violashipman.com/

TWITTER: @viola_shipman

FB: @authorviolashipman

Insta: @viola_shipman

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/14056193.Viola_Shipman

*****

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FTC Disclaimer

I have received ARCs of books free from NetGalley (and many moons ago from BookTrib.com) to review but the majority of the stories are either bought by me or provided for free from the publisher, author, or PR company. The opinions I share are my own and in no way are influenced by an author or publisher. There is no promise of a positive review by any party and there is no additional compensation. Unless otherwise noted, I am not affiliated with any contest or other event mentioned on this blog and I do not receive a paid endorsement for any post.

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