Saturday, November 6, 2021

The Garden of Happy Endings by Barbara O’Neal

I read The Garden of Happy Endings because it was recommended to me by Goodreads. I suppose that was because I had read and enjoyed a couple of novels by Gail Godwin: Father Melancholy's Daughter and Evensong. All three of these books treat priests/ministers in a realistic manner, exposing their flaws but also telling of their struggles to make the world a better place.


The Garden of Happy Endings has a few elements that touch on the mystical side of Christianity: angels, ghosts (human and animal) and callings but that isn't the core of the book. It's about living one's life with faith. That includes losing faith when tragedy or personal disappointment strikes. It also includes having faith fill a void created by loss.

This novel is listed in three categories on Amazon: Women's Divorce Fiction, Sisters Fiction and Women's Sagas. The latter two are obvious. The first less so because there is no actual divorce in the plot. There are, however, three women who split from their partners for different reasons and react to their separations in different ways.

The male characters in the novel are less developed than the females, which makes sense since the book is written from the points of view of the three women: Elsa (a minister going through a faith crisis), Tamsin (Elsa's sister) and Alexa (Tamsin's daughter). They all have stories worth telling.

I recommend this book for anyone looking for a good story of faith and its power to help deal with tragedy and broken relationships.

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