The Painted Table is
story of three generations of women whose life revolves around a beautiful
Norwegian table.
The book’s true heroin
is Sapphire’s, or Saffee how she is normally called. And we find ourselves
emerged into the story of how the table affected her life, her mother’s life
and her mother’s mother’s life.
For her mother, Joann,
the table is full of painful memories of her mother, a wife of a small farmer
in the prairie, with too many mouths to feed. A woman who did her best to take
care of her children and help her husband in his new country.
For Joann the table is
the memory of the mother she lost and longed. Of the childhood she never really
got to experience and of the powerful destruction of a prairie fire she
experienced as a child.
While she grows up,
marries and has children of her own, the table becomes her possession. Table
that she desperately paints over and over again, to get rid of the memories
that haunt her and make her life impossible.
Little by little she loses
her sanity while her two daughters watch the process, unable to reach to the
mother that they need. Obliged to keep their mother’s sanity and guard her,
like their own daughter.
Saffee, the older
daughter, grows up and goes to the college where she finally finds her life and
a way to live it. While the younger daughter, April, is left behind to watch
her mother to wither away further to insanity. And finally their father has to institutionalize
her for her and the family’s safety.
April, the restless
spirit, flees to Europe and Saffee finds herself making her new life. A
relationship with a man she has learned to love and respect, a marriage and the
question of her life: will she repeat the mistakes her mother made in her life?
When she finds out
that her grandmother also had mental health issues her fears double, is she
predestined by fate and biology to repeat the same behavior? Going through
families old papers she finds the answer to the question and the new direction
for her life.
The book tells a
powerful story of redemption and love that is born from guilt, fear and broken
and desperate lives. It is a book for wives, mothers and daughters to read, and
for men who want to understand the women in their lives. In my opinion, a
perfect gift for the upcoming Mother’s Day.
I sincerely recommend the
book for anyone who wants to read a good book with a good story. Or for anyone
who wants to achieve a better understanding of America’s past and how migration
has affected it and the people’s lives in the country.
The Painted Table’s
author Suzanne Field, a graduate of the University of Minnesota, has taught
English as a Second Language in China, Ukraine, and Hawaii. She has also been a
magazine editor and home-school teacher. Suzanne writes to encourage others to
rise above memories and embrace the goodness found in each day. She and her
husband have five children and divide their time between Dallas and Hawaii
where she is a tutor and mentor.
The Painted Table in Amazon
Disclosure: I was provided with a e-copy of this book for review purposes. All opinions expressed in this post are my own.
Disclosure: I was provided with a e-copy of this book for review purposes. All opinions expressed in this post are my own.
Sounds Like A Great Read I Love History Great Review!!
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like a beautiful book! Definitely going to give it a read!
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like a book that will alternately make you laugh and cry while wring every other kind of emotion out of you. I will be looking into reading this book--it is definitely going on my tbr list.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the suggestng this book. Its premise sounds intriguing!
ReplyDeletesounds like a great book, I would so read this book!
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like a really good book. Thanks for sharing, I'll have to see if i can find it on Amazon.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a wonderful, deep story. I will have to check it out! BTW I love reading your blog!
ReplyDeleteThis book sounds like it's one you want to pick up and not put down until you are finished. And I agree, it does sound like a good Mother's Day gift idea too.
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like a great read! I'll have to check it out! :)
ReplyDeleteI love reading books.. and this seems like such an emotional story. Would love to read this
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like a great book, but one that I shouldn't start unless I have plenty of time. I don't thin I will want to put it down
ReplyDeleteit looks like a nice book to check out. thanks! Amber N
ReplyDelete