When Scarlet Carnation opens, both women are close to achieving their dreams. May is walking out with an ideal young man, who will propose when he graduates. Naomi is about to buy a house for her family, and give them all the security they want. There’s a clear sense that they have choices and opportunities their ancestors didn’t, and there’s a lot of optimism.
The first mention of a scarlet carnation is mother’s day, and mother’s love connects a lot of the events in this story. White carnations represent the wearer’s love for a lost mothers, and red carnations represent the love for a living mother. Throughout the book, mother love powers a lot of of the story. We have the two matriarchs of the two families, familiar characters from the previous books.
Later in the story, we see young May struggle with an accidental pregnancy, while the young man she considered her future husband just takes off, without any consequences. Single motherhood will be difficult, she know she’s essentially closing off any other path, but she eventually decides to do this for her daughter’s sake.
Naomi always tries to do the best for her children and whole her family, but the house she buys is in a neighborhood that becomes whites-only, and she may lose all the years of savings put into her home. Her children are much older than May’s, so her sons are old enough to join the military… Again, a mother’s love power the story.
It’s hard to review this book, because I spent most of it disappointed that I wasn’t reading another book by this author, Paper Wife, again. Scarlet Carnation is a perfectly good next installation in the Yellow Crocus series, and I enjoyed reading it. But, I couldn’t stop thinking, yeah, this is an interesting story, but it’s not as good as Paper Wife.
Overall, this is an engaging story, with a historical setting and timely messages about equality.
Imperfect, by Katy Motiey, tells the story of Vida, a young Iranian mother, and how the…
12-year-old Donn Fendler is on a family hike up a beautiful but challenging mountain, when…
I picked up Pamela Mingle's The Pursuit of Mary Bennet after reading The Bennet Sisters'…
Confessions on the 7:45, by Lisa Unger, is a suspense novel, beginning with two seemingly-random…
I originally read American Born Chinese, a graphic novel by Gene Luen Yang, for a…
Candy Fiesta is an adorable match-3 browser game from CulinarySchools.org. Players can enjoy colorful candies…
View Comments
Intrigued by the book's title and cover which gave nothing away as to what the book might be about. That's its an engaging story, with a historical setting and timely messages about equality certainly appeals to me and as I haven't read Paper Wife I can't spend my time reading what sounds like a promising series wishing I was reading this instead. Thanks for a great and honest review.