Goldenseal
By Maria Hummel
By Maria Hummel
By Maria Hummel
By Maria Hummel
By Maria Hummel
By Maria Hummel
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$16.95
Jan 14, 2025 | ISBN 9781640096752
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$27.00
Jan 09, 2024 | ISBN 9781640096066
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Jan 09, 2024 | ISBN 9781640096073
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Praise
Los Angeles Times, A Must Read Title for January
Zibby Mag, A Most Anticipated Title of the Year
CrimeReads, A Best Reviewed Book of the Month
“A meditation on female friendship, loneliness, and how to move on after betrayal, Goldenseal is both melancholy and escapist.” —Zibby Owens, Good Morning America
“Goldenseal is a novel about agency and friendship whose questions reverberate far beyond its two protagonists and their particular time and place. Haunting and tragic, it nevertheless lands on a hopeful note.” —Ilana Masad, Los Angeles Times
“Radiant . . . Goldenseal provides plenty of golden moments, an elixir for these times.” —Gordon Dossett, Manchester Journal
“Maria Hummel probes the complexities of female friendship with a deeply immersive writing style, showcasing her poetic chops and skill in crafting nuance. In this entrancing novel—her fifth—the author weaves a complex tapestry of nostalgia, regret, betrayal, and love against the backdrop of Los Angeles in fading splendor.” —Jenny Bartoy, The Rumpus
“An inventive, immersive book recounting the particular past, old hurts and late healing of two singular characters.” —Sarah McCraw Crow, BookPage
“In this taut, tense, and layered novel, Hummel deftly examines the lives of two flawed women against the backdrop of the upheavals of the twentieth century.” —Booklist
“In this powerful saga of a family’s immigration and reinvention, Hummel explores themes of love, betrayal, and reconciliation . . . Hummel skillfully evokes the Cranes’ gilded world of hotels and Hollywood, and deeply explores the women’s fraught friendship from both points of view. Readers will be rapt.” —Publishers Weekly
“Ranging from pre–World War II Europe to the glamorous era of postwar Hollywood with stops in New York City and a girl’s camp set in the northern woods, Hummel’s dissection of what went wrong between Lacey and Edith borrows from both stagecraft and fairy tale in its analysis. Hummel delivers a lifetime of pathos and revelation in the course of one night.” —Kirkus Reviews
“Suffused with the atmosphere of the past, this exquisitely evocative tale pays tribute to the glamour of old Hollywood. But Goldenseal is no mere nostalgia fest. With wit and acumen, Hummel explores how our divergent interpretations of events can color our memories, locking us in spirals of alienation . . . Goldenseal is a thought-provoking read that makes us question the stories we build from our own memories.” —Margot Harrison, Seven Days
“For anyone who has ever had—and lost—that rarest of gifts: a true friend. A deft, exquisite novel, one that will stay in your heart like a memory, as if it were one of your very own.” —Barbara Bourland, author of The Force of Such Beauty
“I devoured Goldenseal, enchanted by the satin prose and dialogue as smooth as cognac. I loved everything about this story of exquisite tenderness, passionate friendship and betrayal, the electric rendezvous of past and future. The backdrop is an L.A. hotel, haunted by a bygone elegance; but it’s the voices of Edith and Lacey that truly astonish. They’re still ringing in my ears, clear as a hotel fountain.” —Miciah Bay Gault, author of Goodnight Stranger
“Goldenseal is the rare novel whose style perfectly evokes an earlier era while its meaning feels wholly contemporary. Like the characters within it, we realize how hard it is to understand our lives without the wider view that only comes with time. Sweeping yet intimate, and with characters who feel as alive as our closest friends, Goldenseal is a marvel.” —Stacey Swann, author of Olympus, Texas
“Goldenseal is a savagely beautiful novel about the dangers and damages of passionate lifelong female friendship, intertwined with a brilliantly wrought elegy for the twentieth century. Hummel is a powerful writer. This book is extraordinary.” —Kate Christensen, PEN/Faulkner award-winning author of The Great Man and Welcome Home, Stranger
21 Books You’ve Been Meaning to Read
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