
Helen and Edith are about as different as two sisters might be. Although both are hard-working, Edith is content to marry her best friend and take life as it comes, while Helen sees everyone around her as a vehicle to achieving her ambition: to create the best and most successful brewery around. Sadly, it is Helen’s ambition and selfish thinking that drives a wedge between the two sisters, forcing them to lead very separate lives. As we accompany the two sisters on their life journeys, we see how their lives are both ultimately dominated by the pursuit of creating that fine brew.
I believe this is another example of a cute idea only moderately well-executed. The characters are likable but a bit dull, actually, with the exception of Edith’s granddaughter, Diana. Diana we meet after she loses both parents in a tragic accident, and she is struggling to help financially support her grandmother with radical means. She is the most interesting, the deepest, the most colorful. We see her grow, mature and blossom.
I think the issue is the writing in general. There is a story here, but it is relayed with such a flat and almost monotone delivery that it lacks the hills and valleys that fine storytelling will have. Even when there is a major development, it feels glossed over so quickly it is barely noted. While I don’t like drama for the sake of drama itself, there is a reason a story is told. In addition, the author got a bit bogged down in the detail of the brewing of the beer such that it distracted from the storyline itself. While some of it was interesting, too much of it was overly detailed and esoteric – more than what the average reader (ie. me) needed to know or could relate to.
So, maybe rather than being like Diana’s creative craft IPA’s, this book was more like Helen’s tired lite beers?
Hi Marjorie. I started this book but then set it aside… I agree with your review.
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