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Under The Sassafras (2013)

by Hattie Mae(Favorite Author)
3.91 of 5 Votes: 3
languge
English
genre
publisher
Hattie Mae
series
Bon Amie
review 1: I could have very easily rated this book as four or five stars because I really liked the story line. However, it was very difficult to read. I don't know what the hard copy edition is like, but the ebook edition was full of typos--misspellings, misplaced quotation marks, missing words . . . There were also places midchapter where I would suddenly realize there was a time lapse or change of person. If there had been a physical break in the text like you typically see, I would have expected it. All these things added up to a very difficult to read 200 pages.
review 2: Joelette Benoit's two young sons discover an unconscious man lying on the banks of their swamp. Although life has given her many reasons to distrust men, it seems Joelette has no choice but to
... morehelp this one, before the alligators get him. When he turns out to have complete amnesia, his time with them is prolonged. As he appeals to her other family members with his winning ways, she does her best to convince herself that he's not growing on her too.Although this is a contemporary novel, it comes across as historical to me at first, in the remoteness and simplicity of the Benoit family's life. The author writes lovingly of her setting, obviously well-acquainted with it. I love nothing more than when authors highlight their own unique environments in the pages of their novels. This one is embellished with folk tales and local lore, making it a very entertaining read.Joelette's mother-in-law, MaeMae, is a wise old character, but the two boys won me over, causing me to shed a few tears. 9-year-old T-Boy is so vulnerable, in his fixed resolve to be the man of the family, while 5-year-old Ozemae has such an open-hearted, welcoming attitude to the newcomer. Joelette herself seriously annoyed me at one stage, when she jumped to a totally hare-brained and irrational conclusion. You'll know when you get there. Given what she's grown to know about Mansir after all that's happened, what the hey? At least the heroine's occasional silliness is balanced by a hero whose decent instincts are always reliable, even in the confusion of his amnesia. I don't think he ever made one move we could disapprove of.What struck me most about this book is the contrast of the different worlds portrayed. How amazing that such completely different existences can take place on the same planet simultaneously, and neither is superior or inferior to the other. Poor Joelette almost convinced herself that her way was backward and inferior, while we readers have been talked around to know better. You can't help taking a step back to reassess your own way of living too. At least, that's what I found.It's the sort of novel I wish had a cook book at the back! The description of all those yummy Cajun recipes was getting me hungry. I probably wouldn't have a hope of pulling off the gumbo, jambalaya, bread puddings, cornbread, collard greens and all the seafood, but I wouldn't mind trying, they sounded that good.4.5 stars, I think. less
Reviews (see all)
aleeyah
Joelette Benoit’s two sons find a man washed up in the murky water at the edge of the swamp.
Lindsay
A great escape to the bayou. Well rounded people and plot. A light hearted satisfying read :)
junaid25
Really sweet, feel-good romance, the very reason I love romance!
Evi
An alright book but a really bad ending!
biancajtx3
Sweet, predicatble,light, love story.
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