Reviews

The Memory Garden by Mary Rickert

deliberatehalf56's review

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5.0

Absolutely riveting book. I found myself falling in love with Nan before I even truly got to know her. Nan, Ruthie and Mavis remind me of the little old lady I want to be. Full of mysteries, knowledge and love.

The bones of the story are great, the characters well written and the outcome worth every minute.

kblincoln's review

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4.0

I came to The Memory Garden a fan of M. Rickert's short stories from years ago. I hadn't read a story by her in a long, long time, but as soon as we encounter the teenager Bay, and her garden and past-obsessed Nana, it was like curling up in front of a fireplace with a steaming herb tea.

Rickert has a dreaming quality to her characters that makes them as loveable as a befuddled great aunt in the nursing home. Nana is elderly, and her two former best friends finally reuniting with her long after their terrible secret forced them apart, are also a bit vague.

"Are you having goose pimples? Did someone just walk on your grave? Isn't it just the sweetest place? Can't you just picture it with a little garden of daffodils? Deer won't eat daffodils, you know, but they love tulips. And some rocking chairs and wind chimes?"

This quality was atmospheric and homey in her short stories, but in this novel, some times you loose the thread of the conversation. And basically, this novel is one, long conversation about Nana's secrets, who Bay thinks she is, and how the three friends all don't really see each other clearly.

It's a book to sit with and savor, as the characters savor a flower-themed meal in the book (that had my mouth watering) of chicken with rose-petal sauce and curried dahlia lillies, calendula biscuits, and lavendar-goat cheese stuffaed dates.

And tucked within the story are illuminated moments like this one:

"The snow falls, and Nan feels strangely light. She might at any moment rise out of her clogs and fly above her house and garden, like a sparrow. The now falls, and Nan covers her mouth with one hand, as though to prevent the exhalation that will release her from the gravity of a world more beautiful than anything she deserves."

If you like Alice Hoffman's Practical Magic, you'll most likely enjoy this book. A lovely, meandering lovesong of a book focused on growing old, and regrets, and learning to see who your loved ones are, conducted in a garden of witchy herbs and flowers.

raven_morgan's review

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5.0

This book is BEAUTIFUL. Haunting (both literally and figuratively), filled with wonderful characters and food and flowers. Pretty much recommending it to everyone.

davidscrimshaw's review

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3.0

I didn't get into this and didn't finish it.

dmwhipp's review

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2.0

With the promise of ghosts, secrets, witches and more, I was hoping for something along the lines of Barbara Michaels or maybe Sarah Addison Allen. Instead I found very descriptive writing, with very little actually taking place. While the characters were interesting I found the story tedious. And old age is depicted as more reliving rather than living, with so many mentions of regrets and physical ailments that it became rather depressing.

sonofthe's review

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5.0

What a great book. Rickert has been publishing excellent stories for something like the past ten years, but this is her first novel. It is full of great characters, mysteries, joy, sadness, discovery, and more. And it's subtle. A couple times I was reminded of Gene Wolfe's writing, but mostly just Mary Rickert's, which is an excellent thing.

I feel there's much more to write about the story, but it's just sitting in my mind, still unfurling. I'll give it another read and come back. If you haven't read any of her stuff, give some of her short stories a try. Here are a few.

pnw_michelle's review

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5.0

For months now I've been starting books and not finishing them, or finishing them but not feeling especially excited about them. The Memory Garden reassured me that I'm still capable of really enjoying novels. I just needed to find the right one. It's the best ting I've read all year.

What's not to love about a book full of witches, gardens, friendship and family and dark secrets?

SO GOOD. Seriously.

quietdomino's review

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1.0

It was just not the time for me and a book about magic realism to be friends.

ashel3's review

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hopeful lighthearted mysterious reflective slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.5

 The Memory Garden is a cozy book filled with secrets, magic, love, and friendship. When Bay was a baby, she was left on the doorstep of Nan, who may or may not be a witch. Nan adopts Bay and provides a safe and happy home for Bay, but begins to worry that she won't be able to look after Bay if the secrets from her past are discovered. While Nan tries to reconnect with her estranged friends from her past, Bay begins to wonder what secrets Nan is keeping. 
This book is beautifully written, touching on themes of guilt, loss, hope, forgiveness, and family. The way Mary Rickert teases the secrets throughout the chapters kept me engaged and wanting to read more, but it also made it difficult to get to know the characters fully. Nan has protected her secrets for 60 years, so she is written as guarded and with her walls up. The remaining characters are introduced in small doses throughout the book and are difficult to get to know on a deeper level. I had hoped to have the secrets revealed a bit sooner in the book, allowing for more time to get to know the characters unguarded and without barriers to their bonding as the rekindle their friendships. 
If you're looking for a cozy read with some magic and mystery, this is the book for you! 

dreamofbookspines's review

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2.0

Rickert should've focused on *one* thing and done that well, instead of this trainwreck of different ideas and confusing subplots. It's like she wanted to write a magical realism book, but also wanted to write about the terror of reproductive justice that was the 60s (ish). In the end she ended up doing neither well. I wanted to like it, really I did, because at times the writing reminded me of Sarah Addison Allen. Rickert is not an unskilled writer, but the editor should have been vehement that she needed to pick *one* thing to do well and then made her stick with it.