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  • Writer's pictureJudith D Collins

The Beach at Painter's Cove


The Beach at Painter's Cove

ISBN: 978-0062439079

Publisher: William Morrow

Publication Date: 6/13/2017

Format: Paperback

My Rating: 4 Stars From the New York Times bestselling author of Whisper Beach comes another heartwarming story of four generations of women who reunite in their crumbling family mansion by the sea for a dramatic summer filled with love, family, secrets and sisterhood. The Whitaker family’s Connecticut mansion, Muses by the Sea, has always been a haven for artists, a hotbed of creativity, extravagances, and the occasional scandal. Art patrons for generations, the Whitakers supported strangers but drained the life out of each other. Now, after being estranged for years, four generations of Whitaker women find themselves once again at The Muses.

Leo, the Whitaker matriarch, lives in the rambling mansion crammed with artwork and junk. She plans to stay there until she joins her husband Wes on the knoll overlooking the cove and meadow where they first met. Her sister-in-law Fae, the town eccentric, is desperate to keep a secret she has been hiding for years.

Jillian, is a jet setting actress, down on her luck, and has run out of men to support her. She thinks selling The Muses will make life easier for her mother, Leo, and Fae by moving them into assisted living. The sale will also bring her the funds to get herself back on top.

Issy, Jillian’s daughter, has a successful life as a museum exhibit designer that takes her around the world. But the Muses and her grandmother are the only family she’s known and when her sister leaves her own children with Leo, Issy knows she has to step in to help.

Steph, is only twelve-years-old and desperately needs someone to fire her imagination and bring her out of her shell. What she begins to discover at the Muses could change the course of her future.

As Issy martials the family together to restore the mansion and catalogue the massive art collection, a surprising thing happens. Despite storms and moonlight dancing, diva attacks and cat fights, trips to the beach and flights of fancy, these four generations of erratic, dramatic women may just find a way to save the Muses and reunite their family.

A special thank you to William Morrow and LibraryThing Early Reviewers for an early reading copy. Review to follow.

 

Praise

“Shelley Noble effortlessly balances drama and intrigue in a story that ultimately reveals the love and sacrifice extant in even the most dysfunctional families.” (Jamie Beck, author of Worth the Wait)

“With charming, believable character and a delightful setting, this enchanting family drama makes for a perfect beach read.” (Booklist)

 

About the Author

Shelley Noble

When I was a kid, I was always envious of other kids who knew exactly what they wanted to be when they grew up. I wanted to be everything. A concert pianist, an intergalactic diplomat, a nurse, a bronco rider, an astronomer . . .

No sooner had I decided on one thing, then some other fascinating thing came along to change my mind.

I grew up in the south; we played softball and dodge ball, but more often than not, our games often took us on imaginary journeys. We had mock battles: Wyatt Earp, Lancelot, and that alien menace, Dorg. We put on elaborate plays and invited the neighborhood.

Summers could be torturously hot and humid. Some days were just too sticky to do anything but read or sit in my favorite chair and imagine stories about all the things I was going to be when I grew up. These could last for several months. I’d just pick them up where I left off the day before and continue from there. Sometimes I would rewind the story and change the direction it was taking. One summer I had three ongoing stories in my head, that I could pull out one according to my mood.

There’s probably a clinical term for this kind of activity. And it never occurred to me that I was actually training to be a writer. But that came many, many years later.

I the University of Utah where I planned to major in philosophy and dance. Okay so far nothing had changed. I still didn’t know what I wanted to be when I grew up. We could get up to three feet of snow over night. The campus is very large and built on a steep slope. My philosophy class was at the top of the hill first thing in the morning and I usually managed to get there on time. But my ballet class was at the opposite end of the campus and downhill. The ballet teacher would lock the door so late comers couldn’t get in. She said I had to make a choice. I chose dance.

I received a BFA and MFA and went on to teach in a Women’s PE department in California, moved to New York and performed with Louis Falco and Twyla Tharp. I appeared on Great Performances and other PBS shows, consulted on Broadway and As the World Turns. (Those childhood sagas came in handy). I dabbled in movie choreography: Amadeus, Mona Lisa Smile, and the Game Plan; took up ballroom dancing and performed with American Ballroom Theatre.

Then I retired, sort of, to raise two children in the suburbs.

One day I was at the museum with a friend and we were discussing what we were going to do with our lives next. Our children were growing up and they didn’t need our undivided attention any more. She said, “You should write a mystery.” So I did.

The Lindy Haggerty mystery series follows the adventures of a dance company, who somehow keep discovering bodies while taking class, touring, performing and dealing with general artistic angst. They were very busy.

I often appeared on panels with other writers and the name Georgette Heyer kept cropping up as a major influence. I confess, I had never heard of her. I went to the library and checked out The Talisman Ring. I was hooked. I’ve read all of her regencies several times. I listened to them on tape. Discovered other writers and I decided to try my hand at writing Romance.

This resulted in four steamy novels for Brava.

Next came a mystery series based around the Sudoku puzzle and the curator of a puzzle Museum. My new series stars a Manhattan event planner who takes a job in the upstate New York town of Celebration Bay, where everyday is a holiday and mayhem lurks behind every quaint corner.

And after some growing pains and a few years of percolating and morphing, my first women’s fiction, Beach Colors, was published by William Morrow In June 2012.

Several novels later, I think I’ve finally decided what I want to be when I grow up. I can just incorporate all those other wonderful possibilities into the lives of my characters. I can hardly wait to see what’s next. Read More

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