The Tea-Olive Bird Watching Society

by Augusta Trobaugh

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Fiction. Literature. Mystery. Humor (Fiction.) HTML:"Delightful." BOOKLIST
"Readers will laugh at the antics of steel magnolia vigilante justice as the tea-toting, bible-quoting ladies fumble and bumble in their endeavor to protect their cohort and town . . . . the classic good rural vs. evil-urban premise makes for a fine, polite (sort of like a southern contemporary Arsenic and Old Lace) . . . tale." - Harriet Klausner Book Reviews
Coconut cake, grits, poisoned turtle stew, and show more bird-watching . . . the ladies of tiny Tea-Olive, Georgia share a lot of interests, including murder.
Retired judge L. Hyson Breed, a Yankee, picked the wrong Southern woman to trick, bully, and steal from. The members of the Tea-Olive Bird Watching Society plot revenge after the judge's marriage to their friend, Sweet, turns out to be a greedy grab for her land and for control of their town. To the rescue: Beulah, Zion and Wildwood (all named after hymns, as is Sweet). The only problem? The wannabe murderers are southern matrons from a more civilized generation. How does one remain polite even while planning to kill a man and get away with it?
Augusta Trobaugh is the acclaimed author of these southern novels also from Bell Bridge Books
SOPHIE AND THE RISING SUN
MUSIC FROM BEYOND THE MOON
RIVER JORDAN
RESTING IN THE BOSOM OF THE LAMB
SWAN PLACE
PRAISE JERUSALEM!.
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9 reviews
I thought this was a charming little story. Sort of a combination of Golden Girls meet Agatha Christie, combined with elements of Arsenic and Old Lace. The main characters of the story are Beulah, Sweet, Wildwood and Zion, four genteel southern ladies in Tea-Olive, Georgia who attend church together and like to go birdwatching. Their old friend Love-Divine has died and left them a parcel of land for their bird watching activities. She's also left money to the local library and the Homework Helpers Group that helps local kids with their school work. The only caveat is, if the club breaks up, the town obtains the land to do what they want with it.

We learn how the ladies met, meet their families, and hear about their careers. None have show more children and a couple have never been married. They follow traditions where every girl is named for a church hymn, and they love their small town lives in Tea-Olive. Soon, retired New York Judge Hyson Breed moves to Tea-Olive where he courts Sweet. They marry and he immediately gains control of her family estate, which he plans to develop. In just a short time Hyson isolates Sweet from her friends. Beulah and Zion worry about Sweet and when they sneak over to see her they notice bruises and other signs of abuse. Once they realize Hyson is planning to exploit the town they decide the only way to save Tea-Olive and Sweet would be his death.

This book was witty and well written. The events and location of the story were interesting, and I loved the way it showed the ladies' friendship. The ending was really wonderful. It's not a story for anyone wanting a complex plot but is more of a cozy type of novel.
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The Tea-Olive Bird Watching Society has some similarities to the Ladybug Farm books: single women friends living and thriving in a small town. In this case, the women have strong generational ties to the community. But, when their mentor dies and her house and land are sold, they discover that the outside world is ready to move in, in the person of a retired judge whose charm catches almost everyone off guard. Here is where the book takes a different path as two of the friends decide to take things into their own hands where the judge is concerned. I thoroughly enjoyed this dark comedy, where older women again play a strong role, showing what they can do despite their age.

This one has been lurking on my Kindle for a long time. I picked show more it to match the January RandomKIT: Early Birds. It had bird in the title and was, at least a little bit, about birds. show less
I thought this was a charming little story. Sort of a combination of Golden Girls meet Agatha Christie, combined with elements of Arsenic and Old Lace.

The main characters of the story are Beulah, Sweet, Wildwood and Zion, four genteel southern ladies in Tea-Olive, Georgia who attend church together and like to go birdwatching. Their old friend Love-Divine has died and left them a parcel of land for their bird watching activities. She's also left money to the local library and the Homework Helpers Group that helps local kids with their school work. The only caveat is, if the club breaks up, the town obtains the land to do what they want with it.

We learn how the ladies met, meet their families, and hear about their careers. None have show more children and a couple have never been married. They follow traditions where every girl is named for a church hymn, and they love their small town lives in Tea-Olive.

Soon, retired New York Judge Hyson Breed moves to Tea-Olive where he courts Sweet. They marry and he immediately gains control of her family estate, which he plans to develop. In just a short time Hyson isolates Sweet from her friends. Beulah and Zion worry about Sweet and when they sneak over to see her they notice bruises and other signs of abuse. Once they realize Hyson is planning to exploit the town they decide the only way to save Tea-Olive and Sweet would be his death.

This book was witty and well written. The events and location of the story were interesting, and I loved the way it showed the ladies' friendship. The ending was really wonderful. It's not a story for anyone wanting a complex plot but is more of a “cozy” type of novel.
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I bought this book from a Friends of the Library shop in Florida, because the title grabbed me, and the synopsis said it was a blackly hilarious take on Arsenic and Old Lace.

It probably is (a take on Arsenic and Old Lace). And it's not bad. But it's not great either. It's a story that plays on, and exaggerates in small ways, the eccentricity that is often found in small towns in the Deep South (USA). These are all Good Christian Women (though the book isn't at all oriented toward 'being Christian') who have all been graced with names straight out of the Bible (Zion, Beulah and Sweet - from the hymn Sweet by and by) and have all grown up together. Sweet finds herself in a late-in-life marriage to a man that turns out to be a violent show more abuser, and Beulah and Zion take it upon themselves to graciously and politely do away with him before he does away with Sweet.

The elements are all there for a great story, but I found it a tad tedious. It felt like it took forever to get going, though as I look at it know, it was only 60 pages in that Sweet finds herself suffering the consequences of a hasty marriage and Zion and Beulah start plotting. If the domestic violence isn't a trigger warning, there is the aftermath of a horrible incident involving a pet canary that the main character Beulah kept bring up again and again. The first telling of it was bad enough but I almost DNF'd the book because she just kept bringing it up again and again.

The ending is ambiguous, which is fine, but the author stressed the ambiguousness of the ending too strongly so that by the last page I was muttering 'yeah, yeah, I get it - we'll never know' to myself.

It wasn't a bad book; I wasn't scrambling to read it, but I wasn't avoiding it either. It's very readable. It just isn't as gripping a story as it could have been had the characters and pacing been a bit more balanced.
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This book was a fun little read and highlights the unique form of women's friendships in the south. The book was set in little Tea Olive Georgia and we meet some fun and whimsical ladies of the Tea Olive Bird Watching Society. These are women that grew up together, and whose ancestors settled and farmed in the area around Tea Olive. They are all busy with volunteer work, board meetings and of course bird watching. Then a new man arrives in town, and a retired judge from the north no less. The whole community is all in a twitter. Then they begin to realize that this judge doesn't necessarily have their best interests at heart and has his own hidden agenda. When one of the club's ladies marries the judge, it brings all the troubles ever show more closer. Reading as these ladies plan ways to help their friend is hilarious. This author does a good job of character development, and the setting is portrayed realaistically too. Lots of fun and quite delightful. show less
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10+ Works 659 Members
August Trobaugh lives in Georgia.

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Tea-Olive Bird Watching Society
Original publication date
2012-06-30

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Mystery
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3570 .R585 .T43Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
112
Popularity
290,090
Reviews
6
Rating
½ (3.27)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
5
ASINs
2