English Ivy
by Catherine Palmer

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English Ivy by Catherine
Palmer is an entirely delightful book. It depicts the struggles
of a young English woman who finds out she is an heiress
to a large amount of money from a father she never knew
existed. She is betrothed to two different men because of
arrangements by both her fathers, but she finds that she
can love neither of them.
"My own desires in
a husband have little bearing on this matter. I must choose
between the will of two fathers - one living and the other
dead. And I must choose between two husbands - one filled
with venom and bile, the other with wine and hot air."
(pg. 165, English Ivy)
Instead, the young man
who has brought this chaos into her once complacent life
with the last will and testament of her birth father has
attracted her love and affection. A man who is rumored to
be a rogue and a pirate, sailing the seas with cargos full
of jewels. Ivy finds herself torn between the many people
who depend upon her for financial support or financial gain
from her sizable fortune. Through it all she determines
to do what is God's will and to surrender her own desires
to those of God. What will Ivy decide to do? Whom will she
marry and whom will she call family?
I loved this book!! After
reading an excerpt from the sequel (Victorian Rose,
due Fall, 2002), I am convinced I must get my hands on a
copy of it when it is out!! The language of English Ivy
is done beautifully and believably with a charming English
accent. The characters are likable, visual, and memorable.
Who can forget the sweet and impetuous baby of the family,
Clemma who states the truth so plainly? Or dashing rogue
Colin Richmond? Or John Frith "by reputation a libertine
and a sot!" (pg. 118, English Ivy)
One cannot forget Nigel Creeve, stern and sober.
The physical descriptions
of the characters and their actions had me laughing out
loud. For example, the following description of Nigel Creeve
is particularly entertaining and very visual:
"From her seat near
a small lamp, Ivy observed that her intended had somehow
managed to wrinkle the tails of his frock coat by sitting
on them improperly. No matter how solemnly he spoke or how
severely he regarded those assembled, his gravity was impeded
by the fact that he looked very much like a scrawny crow
whose tail feathers had barely escaped the teeth of a fox.
And the more he twittered about the room displaying his
crumpled tails, the harder it was for Ivy to maintain her
composure." (pg. 127, English Ivy)
The author has a particular knack for descriptions
that paint the picture before the reader's eyes in a way
that makes you long for a stroll through the fells and dales
with Ivy.
The gardening imagery is
a strong metaphor for God's tender care for our lives. I
found the scenes with elderly gardener, Mr. Hedgley, to
be particularly meaningful:
"'I've always said
to myself," Mr. Hedgley was telling her, "God
is t' best gardener of all. T' one we should shape ourselves
after. Because 'e loves us, God tends to us. Stays with
us, don't abandon us when troubled times come. God tears
out our weeds and feeds us with t' best sorts of nourishment.'"
(pg. 44, English Ivy)
I also thought that Ivy's
own judgments against Colin Richmond were elements of foreshadowing
of the very things that would challenge Ivy when she becomes
aware of her own wealth and responsibility to others. An
example of her judgment of Colin Richmond, a rogue and a
pirate follows:
" Even if Colin Richmond
were not a pirate or a slave owner - and of those things
she had no assurance - he was still completely unworthy
of either admiration or respect. True, he was wealthy. But
what good would all his riches do if his heart was so truly
black as to abandon his family home and all the people who
looked to him for sustenance? He should not go back to India!
He should stay in England and do his duty. Now that she
knew the truth about the man, Ivy felt she could not leave
his presence too soon." (pg. 44,
English Ivy)
It's very ironic that she
is judgmental of Colin Richmond for the very things she
herself must face later. Perhaps, her struggle with her
own decisions comes as a result of being just as tough on
herself as she is of her expectations on others. That is
what makes her struggle to do God's will so important. She
would ask no less of another than she does of herself. That
is a noble standard for all to live up to. I believe that
is why Ivy is so lovable.
At one point, near the
end of the novel, I was almost fed up with Ivy's saintly
intent to give up her own desires and do only God's will
when it appeared so terribly obvious to me that neither
of these men were God's plan for her life! If only I was
as clear minded as to see the answer to my own challenges
and decisions!! I decided that she was human in her blindness
afterall. Her quest to find God's will is what all faithful
Christians aspire to and this book is a wonderful example
of the blessings and provisions God gives those who seek
His will with a pure and contrite heart.
A definite thumbs up for
this fantastic book!!
