“Ladies of the Lake” by Cathy Gohlke … and a GIVEAWAY!

Posted July 28, 2023 by Leslie in Reviews by Leslie / 22 Comments

Welcome to Friday Reads!

 

You can enter to win a print copy of Ladies of the Lake by Cathy Gohlke, courtesy of the publisher. (US ONLY!) You can enter by using the Rafflecopter link at the bottom of this post. (Contest ends August 4, 2023.) Share on X If you’re the chosen winner, I’ll contact you for your information to pass along.

 

About the book…

After two young women’s deep bond is torn apart, what will it take to bring them together again? In The Ladies of the Lake, the beloved author of Saving Amelie and Night Bird Calling returns with a transformative new historical novel about the wonder and complexities of friendship, love, and belonging.

When she is forced to leave her beloved Prince Edward Island to attend Lakeside Ladies Academy after the death of her parents, the last thing Adelaide Rose MacNeill expects to find is three kindred spirits. The Ladies of the Lake, as the four girls call themselves, quickly bond like sisters, vowing that wherever life takes them, they will always be there for each other. But that is before: Before love and jealousy come between Adelaide and Dorothy, the closest of the friends. Before the dawn of World War I upends their world and casts baseless suspicion onto the German American man they both love. Before a terrible explosion in Halifax Harbor rips the sisterhood irrevocably apart.

Seventeen years later, Rosaline Murray receives an unsuspecting telephone call from Dorothy, now headmistress of Lakeside, inviting her to attend the graduation of a new generation of girls, including Rosaline’s beloved daughter. With that call, Rosaline is drawn into a past she’d determined to put behind her. To memories of a man she once loved . . . of a sisterhood she abandoned . . . and of the day she stopped being Adelaide MacNeill.

 

Amazon purchase link

 

RESILIANCE IN THE FACE OF ADVERSITY

By Cathy Gohlke

 My mother was almost ninety-five years young at the time of this book’s writing. During her lifetime she blessed me with many gifts, among the most precious being her example in living graciously through adversity and in sharing family stories—stories both joyful and tragic. 

Some of Mom’s stories wove their way into the heart of my recent books, Night Bird Calling and A Hundred Crickets Singing.  Two more family stories inspired characters in my newest, Ladies of the Lake.

Like Bernadette in Ladies of the Lake, my mother suffered terrible burns as a small child.  Barely two years old, she was playing with a new comb—a treasured gift in a poor family—dancing near an open fire when the comb caught fire and burst into flame.  Reluctant to let go of her new toy, the fire quickly consumed her hair and clothes, engulfing her in flames. 

Doctors didn’t know if she’d survive.  They believed, if by some miracle she lived, she would be blind and never walk.  After surgeries, skin grafts, and a hospital stay of three months, my mother proved those doctors wrong on all counts.  She walked, saw, went to school, grew up, worked, married, birthed four children, and has lived a full life, one marked by strength, dignity, sacrificial love, and service. 

Like Bernadette, as a child my mother asked if she’d been named Bernice because of her burns.  Of course, the answer was no.  Her own mother’s name was Bertha, so it’s safe to assume her name came as a connecting link to her mother. 

Throughout her life my mother did her best to hide her burns through clothing selection and careful makeup, as does Addie in my story.  Mom remembers feeling self-conscious but, like Bernadette, did not allow her scars to define her or hold her back. 

Sadly, in her nineties, my mother suffered a stroke which left her blind—a terrible blow for a lifelong, avid reader.  Blindness was the one thing she’s feared most in life.  Even so, confined at first to a wheelchair and later to bed, suffering forgetfulness and dementia, Mom remains a stalwart, determinedly optimistic woman whose faith inspires many and whose prayers and wit keep us all going. 

Mom can’t see or hear well, but she still makes every effort to engage others in conversation, including her caregivers, asking how they and their families are doing.  She keeps up with the activities of grand- and great-grand- and great-great-grandchildren as best she can when her children are there to make phone calls for her, even though the names and memories sometimes run together. 

In my sixties, I’m still learning from friendship lessons I’ve observed in my mother and her relationships with other women.  Mom has always made friends easily by being a friend and friendly.  That may sound cliché, but she has lived out the scriptural admonition to treat others as she wanted to be treated, and to love our neighbor as ourselves—even when the other person was unkind or nonresponsive.

Months ago I asked Mom how she kept going through some of the most tragic moments of her life—some events no one should have had to experience and ones we may never share.  Mom replied, “Faith.  Even in the darkest times I always knew that God was behind me, that I was never alone, that everything would be okay.”

I’m blessed beyond words to have such a mother who demonstrates day by day how to live courageously, graciously, resiliently and with that kind of determination.  No matter the day of the year, I’m blessed beyond words to still say happy Mother’s Day to you, Mom.

 

Q&A with Cathy…

 

Q: Where did the inspiration for this book come from?

A:  When I first read of the Halifax Explosion (December 6, 1917) I was astonished that I’d never heard of it, considering that before the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima in WWII, this was the biggest manmade explosion that had ever occurred.

Reading of the devastation, of lives lost and those forever changed by burns, crippling, and blindness in the Halifax Explosion, I was reminded of all my mother endured as a small child after being badly burned, how she overcame that tragedy, and yet how those injuries affected her throughout her lifetime. It was fascinating to me that with so many disappearing in the explosion, some took the opportunity to reinvent themselves and change their identity. I asked, why would a person do that? What would make a person choose to leave everything and everyone behind and forge a new life?

The growing disregard for others and increased bullying that I witness through social media and in our society greatly concerns me. I wanted to show through story that such things—to which we may turn a blind eye—can go beyond rudeness and can have serious and lasting consequences that we may never intend or imagine. It is our responsibility to temper our words and actions and to stand against bullying for the sake of others.

I was inspired by Joseph’s handling of those who wronged him in the Bible, how he reacted when faced with the opportunity either to retaliate or to forgive and embrace. I wanted to see how that could play out through fictional characters.

Lastly, I’ve always been fascinated by the idea of young people growing up in boarding schools, so I looked for a girls’ boarding school in New England, knowing that I wanted to set the main part of the story in the US. That’s when I discovered Miss Porter’s School and its long and interesting history. I could well imagine four girls growing up as close friends in such a setting and together facing numerous challenges—many, like challenges we face today.

Q:  Ladies of the Lake focuses on four friends. Were any of them inspired by real relationships in your own life?

A:  I am blessed with a precious natural sister who was my very first friend and has been my lifelong confidante, as well as dear, longtime, women friends, each a true sister of my heart. Those relationships have taught me the importance of sharing faith, truth from our hearts, trust and integrity; of championing one another’s successes; of comforting through trials and sorrow; and of refusing to allow jealousy, envy, or competition to worm their way between us. Close relationships can be challenged when years, courses and stages of life, or miles come between. Love is not fragile, but it does require nurturing.

Staying connected through letters or emails, cards, phone calls, and visits requires diligence and commitment. The value, the joy, and the strengthening of those relationships for ourselves and as an example to the next generation are worth every investment.

Q:  This book explores themes of friendship, love, and resilience. Which theme was the most fun to write?

A:  Friendship. I loved exploring the wonder and complexities of growing up with close friends from diverse backgrounds. The joy of knowing there was always someone there to comfort or champion, even when others might bully or misunderstand, juxtaposed with the inevitable rivalry and sometimes misunderstandings among friends, was fascinating to write.

A group of close friends was something I longed for as a young person but, with too frequent moving, never experienced for long. As an adult I’ve learned to value greatly the healthy friendship of other women. Busy lives and geography can make staying in touch difficult—unlike girls who see each other daily in a boarding school. I’m keenly aware that nurture must be intentional and not neglected.

Q:  How did research play a role in your writing process?

A:  Shortly before the pandemic, my husband, Dan, and I embarked on an anniversary trip to Nova Scotia, originally planned to fulfill my longtime desire to see Prince Edward Island and all things Lucy Maud Montgomery and to fulfill his desire see the Maritimes. Before going, I read The Great Halifax Explosion, by John U. Bacon, and knew immediately the event described was the background for my story—that, and Prince Edward Island, beloved birthplace and favorite girlhood haunt of Lucy Maud Montgomery.

We spent our first day in Halifax exploring the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic, where I saw graphic images and testimonies of the explosion and its aftermath. The gift shop featured several excellent research books, which I gladly purchased. I spent another day at the Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21, gaining a better understanding of travel, especially for women of the period traveling alone. The Halifax Public Gardens were breathtaking, and I smiled when I saw just where the proposal could take place. So many sites in Halifax, from the famous Halifax Explosion Memorial Bell Tower that stopped at the moment of explosion, to Fairview Lawn Cemetery, where unidentified victims of the explosion—as well as those drawn from the water after Titanic sank—are buried, breathed more of the story into my brain.

We spent time on Prince Edward Island, especially the Anne of Green Gables Museum, Montgomery’s beloved Silver Bush at Park Corner. At trip to Charlottetown and attending the Anne of Green Gables musical was a treat. A trip to Farmington, Connecticut, to snap photographs of Miss Porter’s School and the surrounding area rounded out my tours.

Beyond those wonderful explorations I read numerous research books and memoirs, as well as the published journals of Lucy Maud Montgomery and a history of Miss Porter’s School, and interviewed people for some unique family histories from the period. It was only difficult to stop the research and write the book!

Q:  What will fans of Little Women and Anne of Green Gables especially enjoy about this story?

A:  Fans of Little Women will enjoy the strong and diverse personalities of four girls growing up together, of their united force in facing the trials others present them, as well as the differences that come between them. They’ll recognize and appreciate the girls’ fierce bonds, the hard lessons each one learns, yet how those life experiences ultimately mature them, drawing them closer.

Fans of Anne of Green Gables will love the references to Prince Edward Island and the life and work of Lucy Maud Montgomery. They’ll love the anticipation and reaction of the release of each Anne or Pat of Silverbush book, as well as the correspondence and that beloved author’s mentoring of Addie, the main character, who claims a kinship with Montgomery and dreams of becoming a writer.

Fans of both books will appreciate the precarious and sometimes humorous escapades and scrapes in which the girls find themselves—sometimes as victims and sometimes as perpetrators. Readers will enjoy watching the girls grow into women, using their individual gifts for the good of all.

Q:  How does faith play a role in this story?

A:  There are similarities between the life and choices Joseph and his brothers in the Bible are faced with and the life and growing realizations of Addie and Dorothy in Ladies of the Lake. Joseph was sold into slavery by his brothers. Ultimately, despite horrific experiences not of his own making, he forged a new life with a new name in a new country. Addie, through sudden tragedy, chose to make herself over by claiming a new name and forging a new life in a new country. Like Joseph, when the time came that she was faced with confronting or receiving those she’d never expected to see again—she learned to forgive, and ultimately to reconcile, reclaim, and provide for those she believed had hurt her.

Surrendering personal hurt and pride to the Lord, as well as seeking, accepting, and offering His forgiveness to others and to ourselves, are all major faith themes in Ladies of the Lake.

 Q:  What do you hope readers will take away from Ladies of the Lake?

A:  Sometimes our closest family is found in our dearest friends. I hope readers will embrace the great worth of their friendships among women, how we need one another, how, as the Bible says, “iron sharpens iron” and “two are better than one.” I hope readers will recognize the beauty, the strength, and also the potential fragility of those relationships if they are not nurtured and maintained.

The story speaks of the importance of trust, kindness, compassion, and the transformation of repentance when we are wrong and ask forgiveness, and the joy and freedom when we offer forgiveness. I hope that if readers find themselves in fractured relationships this story will inspire a path toward that first step in seeking and accepting or offering forgiveness that will ultimately bring reconciliation and restoration.

The story addresses bullying and its consequences, the cruelty of gossip and prejudice, and how easy it is to misunderstand and/or misrepresent what we hear or imagine. It shows that sometimes doing nothing is the same as doing wrong. I hope it alerts us to recognize and stand against bullying, for ourselves and for those who need a voice but have none.

I hope it reminds us all that politics and war should never be allowed to override relationships, especially among those who, whether blood relations or not, are family in Christ.

 

Thanks for being here, Cathy. I’m sure readers will enjoy learning more about the book.

 

About Cathy…

 

Bestselling, Christy Hall of Fame, and Carol and INSPY Award–winning author Cathy Gohlke writes novels steeped with inspirational lessons, speaking of world and life events through the lens of history. Her stories reveal how people break the chains that bind them and triumph over adversity through faith. When not traveling to historic sites for research, she and her husband, Dan, divide their time between northern Virginia and the Jersey Shore, enjoying time with their grown children and grandchildren. Visit her website at cathygohlke.com and find her on Facebook at CathyGohlkeBooks.

 

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22 responses to ““Ladies of the Lake” by Cathy Gohlke … and a GIVEAWAY!

  1. Candice Lacy

    Everything about this book interests me most! I love the idea of what happens to a friendship during major events, as well as the historical period of the novel. I’m not familiar with this event, so it will be a great learning experience too!

  2. Patty

    I have read several of Cathy’s more recent books, and really enjoyed them!
    Kathy‘s mother sounds like an amazing woman!

  3. Trudy

    This sounds really good! My mom was 96 and a half when she passed in December, 2020. I grew up hearing about her growing up years and her working during WWII. I also had a friend in school who was burned in a fire, and she’s lived a full life. I feel a slight connection to the book!

    • So sorry for your loss, Trudy. That’s wonderful that she shared those stories with you. Sorry to hear about your friend, but I’m glad to hear she’s had a full life. Based on those experiences, you certainly do have a connection to the book. I think you’ll enjoy it. Good luck!

  4. Sharon Timmer

    I am very excited to read Cathy’s new book. It has been on my TBR list for awhile!!

  5. Megan

    The setting and the history make me want to read this book. Thank you for a chance to win!

  6. Roxanne C.

    The references to Little Women and Anne of Green Gables are an instant hook, especially since I recently read these to my daughter. Stories of deep friendships are always interesting to me.

  7. Perrianne Askew

    As always, Cathy Gohlke does fabulous research and draws in other personal experiences to pen a fantastic novel. I think I would enjoy meeting her Mom!

  8. Maryann

    The story line is intriguing and Cathy’s books are always well researched.

  9. Antoinette M

    I’m excited to to read about the relationships between the girls/women. I like the cover as well!