Lena Hawkins, on the other hand, marries the man who sweeps her off of her feet. She was a socialite from a wealthy family. He was from a poor background, but has done well speculating on the stock market. Then came the financial crash. Lena and Preston are penniless and living in a hovel before Preston manages to find work and housing thanks to his brother. Things start, very slowly, to look up for the Hawkins, and when they find an abandoned home to live in, Lena starts to enjoy making it 'hers'. But Preston's constant determination to be 'on top of the top' at all costs no matter how he gets there has devastating results...
This is a clever look at what real treasure looks like, as well as having lots to say in mostly quiet ways about both friendship and love. Lena ends up working for Claire, a lady who would have been her peer rather than her employer in her previous life, before her marriage estranged her from her wealthy parents. Their working relationship doesn't take long to move to friendship, and conversations about life and love. 'Love isn't always easy, is it?' says Lena. 'Almost never,' Claire agrees. 'Not if you're doing it right.'
And love certainly isn't easy for Lena. The up-and-coming, charismatic man she married isn't the man she deals with when their fortunes are low. He is unpredictable and sometimes hostile. Even in the pages of a book, he sometimes scared me and often infuriated me. He is proud in a dangerous way. He dislikes Lena working, even though they desperately need her wage, and he doesn't like her finding a friend as well as an employer in Claire. He is constantly focussed on getting to the top and being rich and routinely expects that Lena will meekly do what he expects of her when he has 'made it'. He rarely actually listens to what Lena says, or takes the time to see what her heart really wants. When he is finally making more money and is able to move them to a smarter home, he still disregards Lena’s own hopes and dreams and assumes what she wants rather than actually asking her.
Claire says of her late husband George: 'Love, she'd realised, was a choice to be made' and she made it (Claire’s story - told in the book - is lovely), but it is clear again and again that it is a choice which Lena has to make too, and it is not easy. I liked the fact that she did not just run into Preston's arms again, even when I was irritated that he expected her to! That said, Lena doesn't always make the best choices herself and she spends a lot of time crying and being angry. I totally understand why she would rightly be angry, and I would probably also cry! But there do seem to be quite a few scenes where she is 'sobbing'.
Getting past my dislike of Preston (which is counterbalanced somewhat by my liking for John Bellamy and his quiet wisdom) took a long time, and it was lucky that there are so many other much more likeable characters in the book! The setting is also very beautifully described. And I liked the way all the various threads were tied up, although I personally felt the epilogue was surplus to requirements and felt awkward, unnecessary and a bit sad.
This is up there with the author’s earlier richly told historical novels. She has a gift for creating multilevel stories around lesser-known historical events, in this case the loss of Lake Toxaway due to the failure of the earth dam in 1916 and the impact on the resort and local people. It’s a great book club option on what real treasure is, with an excellent set of reading group questions at the end.
I read a pre-publication version supplied by the publisher. No review was required. All comments and opinions above are entirely my own.

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