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Mornings with Rosemary

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks
The international bestselling debut about friendship and love—featuring the life-changing relationship between an anxious young reporter and an eighty-six-year-old lifelong swimmer that "follows in the footsteps of the enormously popular A Man Called Ove...charming and heartwarming" (Kirkus Reviews).
We're never too old to make new friends—or make a difference.

Rosemary Peterson has lived in Brixton, London, all her life, but everything is changing.

The library where she used to work has closed. The family grocery store has become a trendy bar. And now the lido, an outdoor pool where she's swum daily since its opening, is threatened with closure by a local housing developer. It was at the lido that Rosemary escaped the devastation of World War II; here she fell in love with her husband, George; here she found community during her marriage and since George's death.

Twentysomething Kate Matthews has moved to Brixton and feels desperately alone. A once-promising writer, she now covers forgettable stories for her local paper. That is, until she's assigned to write about the lido's closing. Soon Kate's portrait of the pool focuses on a singular woman: Rosemary. And as Rosemary slowly opens up to Kate, both women are nourished and transformed in ways they never thought possible.

"Charming [and] an unusually poignant tale of married love" (The Washington Post), Mornings with Rosemary is a feel-good novel that captures the heart and spirit of a community across generations—an irresistible tale of love, loss, aging, and friendship.

*Originally published as The Lido
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    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2018

      In Brixton, London, two unlikely heroines join forces and rally their community to protest the closing of their neighborhood's lido, i.e., outdoor pool: twentysomething Kate, a lonely, anxiety-ridden journalist who is tasked with writing up the closing; and the lido's longest and most faithful patron, 86-year-old Rosemary, who helps Kate renew her love of swimming and thus find a way to temper her anxiety. Flashbacks through the years reveal Rosemary's memories of the lido, including times shared with her late husband; these and the sunny, feel-good depictions of the daily pool scene will remind readers of their own days at the pool and are the strengths of this novel. Likable characters come together to fight gentrification and their loneliness, and although this work finishes to a predictable ending, the upbeat tone prevails swimmingly. VERDICT Readers who enjoyed the nostalgia and "times-are-a-changin" tone of Kathleen Rooney's Lillian Boxfish Takes a Walk and the camaraderie in Katarina Bivald's The Readers of Broken Wheel Recommend will find much to like in Page's debut.--Sonia Reppe, Stickney-Forest View P.L., IL

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      May 1, 2018
      An octogenarian and a young journalist unite to save a neighborhood pool in London in this debut novel.In many ways, this meditation on community and swimming follows in the footsteps of the enormously popular A Man Called Ove. Both books have an older protagonist--in this case, 86-year-old Rosemary--who has been recently widowed. Both highlight the unexpected benefits of new friendship at this stage in life. Both are charming and heartwarming. But Ove has teeth. What this novel offers instead is an abundance of lively detail and sweetness. The Brixton neighborhood of London is the setting, and it is delightfully immersive. Sitting in Brixton's large public park, the swimming pool of the title is not fancy, but for the characters involved, it is miraculous. Swimming is a baptism; after a dip, troubles are more bearable. Rosemary in particular has a long history with the pool, having swum there as a child during the war when most other children were evacuated and regularly with her husband, George, throughout their marriage. But it is Kate, the novel's other protagonist, who undergoes the greatest transformation. She begins as a chronically depressed, anxious, and friendless young journalist and ends as the leader of the charge to save the pool from purchase and privatization. That goal is what first leads Kate to Rosemary, then bonds them, then opens Brixton to her as a place she can call home. The plot is straightforward, as is, for the most part, the story of Rosemary and George's courtship and marriage, told simultaneously. Rosemary's miscarriages (ultimately, they have no children) and George's death are barely touched on, seemingly in favor of happier memories of swimming, of which there are countless.The stakes feel low, but the water's fine.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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