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Blackberry Wine by Joanne Harris
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Blackberry Wine

by Joanne Harris

Series: Food Trilogy (2)

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1,113243,551 (3.57)29
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Harper Perennial (2001), Paperback, 368 pages

Member:unevendays
Collections:Your libraryRating:*****
Tags:fiction
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English (22)  Dutch (2)  All languages (24)
Showing 1-5 of 22 (next | show all)
A delicious, tangible, sort of incredible story with a lot of rich descriptions and characters I'd like to meet again. This was the first book by Joanne Harris I'd read, but I'd love to read more. ( )
  jenniferbee | Oct 9, 2009 |
Harris did a beautiful job at describing all of the sensations, and experiences one has while drinking a glass of wine, and brings those emotions into her characters combined with the divulging into the world of wine making and life in a small town, the bonds a person can have with in close-knit communities, and how those bonds affect a person’s life, Blackberry Wine was a well written, beautifully told story, that pulled me in from page one.

In the story, Jay flees England buying a farm house in a outside a small town, that brought back memories of a childhood mentor, he brings a few possessions, including the six bottles of “specials” (wine) and a typewriter, that he uses to write his next big hit, gaining inspiration from the towns people and a “scandal” that happened years before he arrived. But instead, the “specials” invoke something different for Jay, as he reminisces his childhood years, times spent with his mentor, and him reconnecting to his mentor, as he find himself again, and his place in life. All of the emotions and memories are brought out with each bottle of wine from the “specials” collection which brings out memories, senses and emotions from all people, when they join him. The wine, as it seems has a bit of magical ability, allowing people to explore themselves in their pasts.

As you can see there’s a bit of an interesting underbelly of magic here with the wine. Often the wine is described as talking, or laughing as it sits in the duffel bag, or in the wine cellar, and often the narrator states when the each bottle is open, the “wine’s” voice is exposed. What makes the book even more interesting is that the narrator is a bottle of wine. The whole story is told from the eyes, of an unopened bottle of wine, which truly is one of the most unique methods of narration I’ve ever seen. And if you already have guessed, the story ends, when the bottle is opened and drunk.

Other parts of the story contained farming life, small town life and gossip of the scandal that happened in the town, involving Jay’s neighbour, I won’t go to far into that, for fear of ruining it, but I liked that side plot of the story, although parts were predictable, I still enjoyed that part of the story. The book also bounces around time periods a bit, going from present time, to years in Jay’s childhood, although each chapter labels which time you’re in so you shouldn’t be confused what time period you’re in.

One criticism is that some of the characters seem to be one sided, and a little stereotypical, it’s not a big issue for me, because there’s only a few I really found to be like this, but there were just a few characters, that didn’t seem to fit with the rest of the story, they just were. Also there was this one part, I can’t say what, but the one part near the end was a little weird, and also didn’t seem to fit with the story.

Overall a wonderful book full of magic, and the quiet life of small town living, and the emotions and deliciousness of wine drinking and the powers it can has over ones emotions, self and friendship.

Review is also on my blog: http://juliebooks.blogspot.com/2009/0... ( )
  bookwormjules | Sep 4, 2009 |
What can I say? I don't drink, but this book makes me want to.
You have to be a certain brand of author to be able to talk about the taste and textures of foods and drinks throughout a whole book (actually several, since she did Chocolat as well), but Joanne Harris does this effortlessly, and most importantly for me, without repetition.
Maybe it is too easy to sound charming when talking about an adorable French village with all its inherent quirks and tales, but Harris is able to portray atmosphere, ambience, call it what you will, but you can immerse yourself in a book like this as easily as if it were the wine that gave the book its name. And it's the kind of book I feel people with all kinds of book preferences can enjoy. ( )
1 vote unlikelyaristotle | Aug 2, 2009 |
Set in the same French village as Chocolat and with many of the same characters, this is the story of Jay, a writer looking to return to the way of his childhood and the way of life of his mentor. This one definitely wasn't as good as Chocolat or any of the other Joanne Harris novels that I've read. I had a really hard time getting into the story and did not feel attached to any of the characters. It did, however, make me want to garden and bake bread. ( )
  fasciknitting | May 18, 2009 |
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Dedication
To my grandfather, Edwin Short: gardener, winemaker and poet at heart.
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Wine talks. Everyone knows that.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0380815923, Paperback)

Joanne Harris's first novel, Chocolat, was set in the sleepy French village of Lansquenet, where enchantment, romance, and soft-centered truths issued from the local confectioner's shop. She returns to the same location for Blackberry Wine. But as the title suggests, she's shifted her focus from food to drink, choosing a half-dozen bottles of homemade plonk as the catalyst for her "layman's alchemy." And even the narrator is no human being but a faintly tannic Fleurie 1962: "A pert, garrulous wine, cheery and little brash, with a pungent taste of blackcurrant!"

There are, of course, some less vinous characters in the novel. Harris's protagonist, Jay Mackintosh, is a former literary star, now sadly stalled. He spends his time writing second-rate science fiction, leading a hollow media life, and drinking: "Not to forget, but to remember, to open up the past and find himself there again." Yet the nice, expensive wines don't do the trick. Instead, six "Specials"--a gift from his old friend Joe--function as Jay's magical elixir. Like Proust's lime-blossom tisane, they give him the gift of his memories but also unlock his future, which encourages him to flee the rut of his London life and buy a house in Lansquenet.

As Jay settles in, he contemplates his childhood friendship with Joe, whose idiosyncratic outlook was the inspiration for his only successful book. Meanwhile, he becomes involved in village life, encountering some familiar faces from Chocolat. Caro and Toinette, the snooty troublemakers, soon put in an appearance, and Josephine, the bar owner and battered wife of the earlier novel, becomes a real friend. But it's a new character, the enigmatic Marise, who becomes the focus of Jay's attention--and who helps to restore his literary joie de vivre. This feat of resurrection makes for a hugely enjoyable read. It also goes one step further in adding Lansquenet to the map of imaginary destinations, where daydreams can come true with intoxicating frequency. --Eithne Farry

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:53 -0400)

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