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The Silver Bough by Lisa Tuttle — book cover

The Silver Bough

by Lisa Tuttle
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Overview

The award-winning author of The Mysteries returns with another captivating novel in which modern-day enigmas and age-old myths come together with spellbinding results. Here is an enchanting tale set in a land rich with folklore–and ripe for a rekindling of the old ways.

Nestled on the coast of Scotland, Appleton was once famous for its apples. Now, though the orchards are long gone, locals still dream of the town’s glory days, when an Apple Queen was crowned at the annual fair and good luck seemed a way of life. And outsiders are still drawn to the charming village, including three very different American women.

Enchanted by Appleton’s famously ornate, gold-domed library, divorcée Kathleen Mullaroy has left her cosmopolitan job to start anew as the town’s head librarian. Widowed Nell Westray hopes for a quiet life of gardening in the place where she and her husband spent their happiest moments. And young Ashley Kaldis has come to find her roots, and learns that the town’s fortunes turned when her grandmother was crowned Apple Queen–then mysteriously disappeared.

When a sudden landslide cuts Appleton off from the wider world–and the usual constraints of reality–the village reveals itself to be an extraordinary place, inhabited by legendary beings, secret rooms, and the blossoming of a rare fruit not seen in decades. Most unexpected is a handsome stranger who will draw all three women into an Otherworld in which luck and love will return to Appleton–if only one of them will believe.

Lush with the romance and allure of ancient traditions, The Silver Bough will propel you into a land where, as in Eden, the bite of a single apple can alter the whole course of reality.

From the Hardcover edition.

About the Author, Lisa Tuttle

Lisa Tuttle was born and raised in Houston, Texas, won the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer in 1974, and now lives with her husband and daughter on the west coast of Scotland. Her first novel, Windhaven, was written with George R. R. Martin. Other novels include Lost Futures, which was short-listed for the Arthur C. Clarke Award, The Pillow Friend, and The Mysteries.

From the Hardcover edition.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

One bite of a magical golden apple holds the key to a Scottish town's renewal and may grant the heart's desire for three lucky American women, provided they take a leap of faith in this enchanting tale from Tuttle (The Mysteries). In the coastal village of Appleton, Ashley Kaldis, who's recently lost her parents, traces her grandmother's roots; Kathleen Mullaroy works as librarian of the local (haunted) library; and Eleanor "Nell" Westray, a grieving young widow, cultivates a rare Scarlet King apple tree that produces the once-in-a-lifetime Golden Queen apple. This is the same apple that the oddly ageless Roan Wall, the town's recently returned prodigal son, was supposed to share some 50 years earlier with the then Apple Queen, who instead ran away to America, insuring Appleton's decline. Full of delightful characters, engagingly fey imagery and well-researched Celtic lore, this superior fantasy provides a juicy denouement fit for a queen. (Apr.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

When three American women, each with her own personal tragedy, arrive in the Scottish city of Appleton, renowned for its apples, each hopes to recuperate in the quiet, natural cycles of Scottish rural life. Then a landslide severs Appleton's connection with the outside world and opens it up to a different reality. The author of The Mysteries brings together odd pieces of Scottish folklore, Celtic myth, and international mythology in a tale that explores what people do for what they believe in. Tuttle's fluid style and storytelling talent make this a good addition to most fantasy collections. Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Contemporary fantasy set in Scotland, from Tuttle (The Mysteries, 2005, etc.). Situated on Scotland's northwest coast, the town of Appleton enjoys a mild climate, has a spectacular, if crumbling, library and museum and once produced apples that were the envy of the country. At the annual Apple Fair, a dark stranger would crown the Apple Queen and share with her one of Appleton's famed apples, thus securing the town's prosperity for the coming year. Once in a great while, a magical golden apple appeared, determining the town's magical fortunes half a century hence. But once the apple business collapsed, the town slowly decayed. Now, three American women-librarian Kathleen Mullaroy, would-be apple-harvester Nell Westray and young Ashley Kaldis-are there to visit relatives-and find out about Phemie, who ran away from Appleton in 1950 rather than be crowned Apple Queen. Her dark "stranger"-actually Ronan Wall, scion of one of the town's oldest families-helped her flee. Problem was, this was a golden-apple year, so the town lost its luck. Now, a landslide blocks the only road in or out, cutting the town off from the rest of the world-and who should show up but Ronan himself, miraculously youthful and apparently eager to make amends for his transgression of old. As if to confirm his power, Nell's apple tree brings forth a golden apple. But which of the three women will Ronan choose, and whose heart's desire will be realized?Despite the layered folklore and hardworking backdrop, this suffers from tepid romancing and incoherent plotting.

Book Details

Published
December 26, 2006
Publisher
Random House Publishing Group
Pages
368
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780553587357

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