The Bear’s House
The town of Blackwell, Massachusetts, changed its name in 1786. It had been called Bearsville when it was founded in 1750, but it quickly became apparent that a name such as that did little to encourage new settlers. True, there were nearly as many black bears in the woods then as there were pine trees, but there were also more eel in the river than there were ferns sprouting on the banks. You
could stick your hand into the murky green shallows and catch half a dozen of the creatures without using bait. If you ventured in waist- high you’d be
surrounded in moments. Yet no one considered calling the village Eelsville, even though people ate eel pie on a regular basis and many of the men in town wore eelskin belts and boots. They said wearing eel made them lucky at cards, but when it came to the rest of life, love for instance, or business acumen, they had no luck at all.
The town’s original name was always discussed and remembered in August, a dry yellow month when the grass was tall and bears ate their fill of blueberries on Hightop Mountain, a craggy Berkshire County landmark that separated Blackwell from the rest of the world. August was the time when the festival to commemorate Hallie Brady was held, but those who thought she’d been born in that month were mistaken. In fact, she had been born in Birmingham, En gland, on the sixteenth of March into unhappy circumstances. An orphan, long on her own, she’d been forced to find employment at a hatmaker’s at the age of eleven. It was an unsavory situation that included more than merely fashioning hatbands out of black ribbon. The factory owner lurked close by, running his hands over Hallie’s pale, freckled skin as though he owned her. She bided her time. She was the sort of person ready to face the wilderness, a young woman certain she had nothing more to lose. When compared to her childhood, all the hardships of the Berkshires added up to heaven, despite the deep, nearly endless winters.
Even in the heat of summer, when there were mosquitoes skimming over the surface of the river and bees bumped against windowpanes, people looked out at Hightop and shivered. Not everyone was as brave as Hallie Brady, and the local people who followed the founders knew how killing the darkest months in these parts could be. They wondered how the first settlers had managed to survive that initial winter, when there were bears in every tree and the snowdrifts were said to be as tall as a man. Before Hallie and the settlers arrived, the far side of Hightop was unpopulated. The native people who camped nearby vowed that no man would ever find happiness west of the mountain. Hunters never crossed into that territory even though the woods were filled with wolves and fox. There were red- tailed hawks, deer, squirrels, and more bears than anyone could count. Still
they stayed away.
Reprinted from THE RED GARDEN Copyright © 2011 by Alice Hoffman. Published by Crown Publishers, a division of Random House, Inc.
The bestselling author of more than 20 novels—including Practical Magic (the basis for the major motion picture) and the Oprah® Book Club selection Here on Earth—Alice Hoffman is one of our most distinguished novelists, and her sensuous brand of magical realism makes her books a joy to read and savor.
In The Red Garden, Hoffman pens a lyrical tale about a small Massachusetts town, 300 years of history and a garden where only red plants grow. Beginning with its founding—and how an adept young woman helped the settlers survive the first winters—the book flits around in time, inviting us into each generation’s lives as they forge new beginnings, cope with tragedy, triumph against adversity and find love in even the strangest of places.
Hardcover : 336 pages
Publisher: Crown Publishers Inc./Random House ( January 25, 2011 )
Item #: 13-177060
ISBN: 9780307393876
Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 8.25 x 0.65inches
Product Weight: 20.0 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

I don't get this book. This is the second book I have read from this author. I don't think I will get another one. The characters are dark and depressing. I kept waiting for the point of following this town through the years. I never found it! In fact all I got was depressed!
Reviewer: Joanna
I have loved other books by Hoffman, so i was initially pleased to find a new one. However, each time I pick up the book I literally cannot remember what the book is about and where I was in it. As an avid reader with usually 2 or 3 books going at once, this was a new experience for me. Sometimes weeks go by between readings and I pick up right where I left off, but not with this one. Also, it seems more like a book of short stories than a novel. In places it feels like it's not even Hoffman writing it....If I had this to do again I'd re-read one of her previous books and take a pass on this one.
Reviewer: beckerzzz
I bought this book based on the reviews, and I can't get past page 50! I have tried three times to continue but with no luck at all. SO DISSAPOINTED!!!!
Reviewer: Lisa
A great story and I loved the way it flowed from generation to generation! Was sad to get to the ending as I wanted to know more about the characters!! A great story and another must read!!!
Reviewer: Bev
I have never read any of Alice Hoffman's books, but this one was outstanding in the manner in which she told the story, from generation to generation. It really held my interest and I liked the continuity.
Reviewer: Marsha
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