Cold Sassy Tree

by Olive Ann Burns | Literature & Fiction | This book has not been rated.
ISBN: 038531258x Global Overview for this book
Registered by wing6of8wing of Silver Spring, Maryland USA on 2/8/2016
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4 journalers for this copy...
Journal Entry 1 by wing6of8wing from Silver Spring, Maryland USA on Monday, February 8, 2016
A book that I recently acquired for the purposes of giving it to Melydia, as is decreed by universal law.

Journal Entry 2 by wing6of8wing at Gaithersburg, Maryland USA on Saturday, May 21, 2016

Released 7 yrs ago (5/21/2016 UTC) at Gaithersburg, Maryland USA

CONTROLLED RELEASE NOTES:

Provided we are not rained out tomorrow, I will be seeing KateKintail at the Gaithersburg Book Festival where the members of BookCrossing in Washington DC (BCinDC) will have a booth. For her recent birthday I gave her several books from her wishlist, but I couldn't physically lay on hands on this copy of CST. Now that I have found it, I must pass it along to her. What she will do with it I have no idea whatsoever {plausible deniability, I has it!}.

Any future reader or recipient of this book is encouraged to leave a journal entry here on the BookCrossing site to let prior readers know the fate of the book. You can make an anonymous entry without joining the BookCrossing movement, but if you are interested in joining, it is a free and spam-free community where your contact information is not shared with others. Best of all, members receive private messages via e-mail from books like this one when those books are journaled, allowing for long-term relationships between books and readers.

Journal Entry 3 by KateKintail at Burke, Virginia USA on Monday, June 27, 2016
Thank you for this wishlist book! I actually recently earread this book and had this to say:

This felt like a YA book before YA even became a genre. It's the story of young Will Tweedy in the town of Cold Sassy in 1906 and his family. After his grandmother died, his grandfather almost immediately married a much younger (Yankee) woman. The scandal of it spreads through the town. It's a story of Will's experiences from camping with his friends to getting run over by a train to finding out about his grandfather and Miss Love's relationship to the first new car in town (his father's!). Everyone feels like a real person I enjoyed getting to know. In fact, I cried at the ending; I really didn't see that coming. It was a wonderful look at a unique set of characters in a time and place I wouldn't have gotten to know otherwise. I definitely enjoyed it more than I thought I would.

Journal Entry 4 by KateKintail at Centreville, Virginia USA on Monday, June 27, 2016

Released 7 yrs ago (6/25/2016 UTC) at Centreville, Virginia USA

CONTROLLED RELEASE NOTES:

Leaving this cold sassiness for my friend!

Journal Entry 5 by wingMelydiawing at Centreville, Virginia USA on Saturday, July 2, 2016
I found this under a pile of green construction paper "leaves" on my desk when I returned home from vacation on June 28th. I have strange friends.

I read this several years ago, and this is what I had to say then:

Will Tweedy was 14 years old and living in Cold Sassy, Georgia, in the summer of 1906 when his grandpa came home one day to announce he was marrying a woman half his age, not three weeks after the death of his first wife, Will's grandmother. The town, of course, is scandalized, and continues to be so as the story wears on. This is more of a "slice of life" depiction than much of a story - the author starts with a setting (the town of Cold Sassy) and a premise (Grandpa's new bride), and meanders through clever little anecdotes and asides for a while until the author decides it's time to end the story and starts killing off characters. This is not a bad story, just a fairly standard one. I don't have very strong feelings about it either way. The constant backcountry dialect got kind of old, but I feel that way about all books narrated in dialect so that's not exactly serious criticism. On the other hand, I could hear all the characters in my head with no problem. In the end, if you like this era of historical fiction, you'll enjoy the feeling of living in Cold Sassy; if you prefer more plot-driven stories where everything happens for a reason, you might want to skip this one.

Journal Entry 6 by florafloraflora at Portland, Maine USA on Friday, September 9, 2016
Going to a book party!

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