
The Edge of Summer
by Viola ShipmanΒ
ISBN: 978-1525811425
Paperback OriginalΒ
Publication Date: July 12, 2022
Publisher: Graydon House
Blurb:
Bestselling author Viola Shipman delights with this captivating summertime escape set along the sparkling shores of Lake Michigan, where a woman searches for clues to her secretive mother’s past
Devastated by the sudden death of her motherβa quiet, loving and intensely private Southern seamstress called Miss Mabel, who overflowed with pearls of Ozarks wisdom but never spoke of her own familyβSutton Douglas makes the impulsive decision to pack up and head north to the Michigan resort town where she believes sheβll find answers to the lifelong questions sheβs had about not only her motherβs past but also her own place in the world.
Recalling Miss Mabelβs sewing notions that were her childhood toys, Sutton buys a collection of buttons at an estate sale from Bonnie Lyons, the imposing matriarch of the lakeside community. Propelled by a handful of trinkets left behind by her mother and glimpses into the history of the magical lakeshore town, Sutton becomes tantalized by the possibility that Bonnie is the grandmother she never knew. But is she? As Sutton cautiously befriends Bonnie and is taken into her confidence, she begins to uncover the secrets about her family that Miss Mabel so carefully hid, and about the role that Sutton herself unwittingly played in it all.
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Excerpt:
BUTTONHOLE
A small cut in the fabric that is bound with small stitching. The hole has to be just big enough to allow a button to pass through it and remain in place.
My mom told everyone my dad died, along with my entire familyβgrandparents, aunts, uncles, and allβone Christmas Day long ago.
βFire,β sheβd say. βWoodstove. Took βem all. Down to the last cousin.β
βHowβd you make it out with your little girl?β everyone would always ask, eyes wide, mouths open. βThatβs a holiday miracle!β
My mom would start to cry, a tear that grew to a flood, and, well, that would end that.
No one questioned someone who survived such a thing, especially a widowed mother like Miss Mabel, which is what everyone called her out of deference in the Ozarks. Folks down here had lived hard lives, and they buried their kin just like they did their heartache, underneath the rocky earth and red clay. It took too much effort to dig that deep.
Thatβs why no one ever bothered to check out the story of a simple, hardworking, down-to-earth, churchgoing lady who kept to herself down here in the hollersβdespite the fact me and my mom both just appeared out of thin airβin a time before social media existed.
But I did.
Want to know why?
My mom never cried.
She was the least emotional soul Iβd ever known.
βHow did you make it out with me?β I asked her countless times as I grew older, when it was just the two of us sitting in her sewing room in our tiny cabin tucked amongst the bluffs outside Nevermore, Missouri.
She would never answer immediately, no matter how many times I asked. Instead, sheβd turn over one of her button jars or tins, and run her fingers through the buttons as if they were tarot cards that would provide a clue.
I mean, there were no photos, no memories, no footsteps that even led from our fiery escape to the middle of Nevermore. No family wondered where we were? No one cared? My mother made it out with nothing but me? Not a penny to her name? Just some buttons?
We were rich in buttons.
Oh, I had button necklaces in every color growing upβ red, green, blue, yellow, white, pinkβand I matched them to every outfit I had. We didnβt have money for trendy jewelry or clothesβtennis bracelets, Gloria Vanderbilt jeansβso my mom made nearly everything I wore.
Kids made fun of me at school for that.
βSutton, the button girl!β theyβd taunt me. βHand-me-downs!β
Wasnβt funny. Ozarks kids werenβt clever. Just annoyingly direct, like the skeeters that constantly buzzed my head.
I loved my necklaces, though. They were like Wonder Womanβs bracelets. For some reason, I always felt protected.
Iβd finger and count every button on my necklace waiting for my mom to answer the question Iβd asked long ago. Sheβd just keep searching those buttons, turning them round and round, feeling them, whispering to them, as if they were alive and breathing. The quiet would nearly undo me. A girl should have music and friendsβ laughter be the soundtrack of her life, not the clink of buttons and rush of the creek. Most times, Iβd spin my button necklace a few times, counting upward of sixty before my mom would answer.
βAlive!β sheβd finally say, voice firm, without looking up. βThatβs how we made it outβ¦alive. And you should feel darn lucky about that, young lady.β
Then, as if by magic, my mom would always somehow manage to find a matching button to replace a missing one on a hand-me-down blouse of hers, or pluck the βpurtiestβ ones from the countless buttons in her jarβiridescent abalone or crochet over wound silk f lossβto make the entire blouse seem new again.
Still, she would never smile. In fact, it was as if she had been born old. I had no idea how old she might be: Thirty-five? Fifty? Seventy?
But when sheβd find a beautiful button, she would hold it up to study, her gold eyes sparkling in the light from the little lamp over Olβ Betsy, her Singer sewing machine.
If I watched her long enough, her face would relax just enough to let the deep creases sigh, and the edges of her mouth would curl ever so slightly, as if she had just found the secret to life in her button jar.
βLook at this beautiful button, Sutton,β sheβd say. βSo many buttons in this jar: fabric, shell, glass, metal, ceramic. All forgotten. All with a story. All from someone and somewhere. People donβt give a whit about buttons anymore, but I do. They hold value, these things that just get tossed aside. Buttons are still the one thing that not only hold a garment together but also make it truly unique.β
Finally, finally, sheβd look at me. Right in the eye.
βLots of beauty and secrets in buttons if you just look long and hard enough.β
The way she said that would make my body explode in goose pimples.
Every night of my childhood, Iβd go to bed and stare at my necklace in the moonlight, or Iβd play with the buttons in my momβs jar searching for an answer my mother never provided.
Even today when I design a beautiful dress with pretty, old-fashioned buttons, I think of my mom and how the littlest of things can hold us together.
Or tear us apart.
*****
Author Info:
VIOLA SHIPMAN is the pen name for internationally bestselling author Wade Rouse. Wade is the author of fourteen books, which have been translated into 21 languages and sold over a million copies around the world. Wade chose his grandmotherβs name, Viola Shipman as a pen name to honor the woman whose heirlooms and family stories inspire his fiction. The last Viola Shipman novel, The Secret of Snow (October 2021), was named a Best Book of Fall by Country Living Magazine and a Best Holiday Book by Good Housekeeping.Β
Wade hosts the popular Facebook Live literary happy hour, βWine & Words with Wade,β every Thursday at 6:30 p.m. EST on the Viola Shipman author page where he talks writing, inspiration and welcomes bestselling authors and publishing insiders.
Twitter: @Viola_Shipman
Facebook: Author Viola Shipman
Instagram: @Viola_Shipman
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