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Summit Avenue
A Novel by Mary
Sharratt How
can you weave a life from fairy tales? Set in the Minneapolis and Saint Paul during
the First World War, Mary Sharratt’s debut novel is the story of a young German
immigrant experiencing her spiritual and sexual awakening. As
the poet Mandy Sivers says, Summit Avenue is A book about Woman . . . and
the tremendous, multiplied hurdles and barriers which women had to overcome as
immigrants. This turbulent tale, while apparently telling of a lesbian relationship,
is talking even more about the flight back into the mythic depths of womanhood-the
old, pre-Christian, woman-centered community. When
Kathrin’s mother dies, Kathrin immigrates to America where she is reunited with
her cousin Lotte and begins work at a mill sewing flour bags. Soon Kathrin meets
the Jeliniks, the owners of a small bookstore. While Jan, a compassionate, elderly
man, loves his bookstore, his nephew John would rather see it reopened as something
more profitable, a testament to the American dream of prosperity for which he
so desperately hungers. Jan introduces Kathrin to Violet Waverly, who offers
Kathrin a job typing and translating a book of fairy tales that her husband was
compiling before he died. Violet invites Kathrin to live with her in her mansion
on Summit Avenue, the richest neighborhood in Saint Paul. Both women, left wounded
and alone in different circumstances, find increasing solace and warmth in each
other. Although
Violet can offer Kathrin love, compassion, and a glimpse of the dizzying heights
of wealthy upper-class grandeur, she cannot fully disguise the painful secrets
hiding behind the glitter. As Kathrin comes closer to the heart of Violet's mysterious
past, she discovers that life, like a fairy tale, is often based on illusion. Click
here for Reading Group Guide |