Along Came Mary by Jo-Ann Mapson

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: December 2003
  • 384pp
  • Sales Rank: 186,191
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: December 2003
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 384pp
    • Sales Rank: 186,191

    Synopsis

    USA Today called Jo-Ann Mapson's national bestseller Bad Girl Creek "a valentine to oceans of good women who survive bad beginnings and worse men." Now the author, hailed as "one of the most gifted writers of the contemporary urban West" (Los Angeles Times), brings back the hard-luck women of her acclaimed previous novel — and introduces another indelible character into their midst.

    After finally wising up to her drunken rodeo crooner lover, Mary Madigan saddles up her twin border collies and takes her act on the road, leaving miles of heartache and highway behind. When she meets Rick, a charming and persistent journalist haunted by his own ghosts, she suddenly has a travel companion and a new lover (with an all-too-familiar set of tricks).

    Their travels ultimately bring them to Bad Girl Creek, where the waters have already been troubled. Phoebe's pregnancy is life-threatening, Nance's break-up diet has turned dangerously successful, Beryl is still struggling to adjust to life after prison, and HIV-positive Ness is distancing herself from the "healthy" world — if you can call it that.

    But these are the Bad Girl Creek ladies: they are resilient. The ways they pull together, cheer each other on through good times and bad, and cope with every curve life throws at them make up the heart and soul of this powerful and big-hearted novel.


    Publishers Weekly

    This follow-up to Mapson's popular Bad Girl Creek introduces a new face to the spirited gang of hard-luck women running a California flower farm. Mary Madigan ("Maddy") Caringella is a rodeo performer who decides to leave her job (and her boozy singing partner and boyfriend) and travel across the country, taking part in karaoke competitions. In Oklahoma City, she hooks up with Rick Heinrich, a fiercely independent middle-aged journalist. While the two are in New Mexico, they meet Beryl Anne, an ex--Bad Girl who's now touring the country with her guitarist beau. In various ways, Maddy and Rick's lives become entwined with the lives of the women of Bad Girl Creek, and eventually they make their way to the farm itself, encountering some rough patches in their relationship along the way. The book is told in the voices of several characters, primarily Maddy, Rick, Beryl and Phoebe, the founder of the flower farm-she is now pregnant and facing a life-threatening delivery. Mapson gives updates on other Bad Girls as well: Ness is learning to live with HIV and Nance is fighting her anorexia, even as she plans a wedding to Phoebe's brother, James, and pines for her old love. Maddy is an appealingly saucy protagonist, though her voice gradually loses its distinctiveness and blends with that of the other narrators (who tend to sound alike) as the book wears on. The story is as sentimental as its precursor, but those who enjoyed the female bonding and entrepreneurial antics of the Bad Girls will be pleased with this chatty sequel. Literary Guild and Doubleday Book Club alternate. (Jan.)

    More Reviews and Recommendations

    Biography

    Jo-Ann Mapson is a writer, teacher, poet, and the author of eight novels. She lives in Anchorage, Alaska. Visit the author at www.joannmapson.com.

    Customer Reviews

    • Reader Rating:
    • Ratings: 2Reviews: 2

    I want to go visit if not live there....by Anonymous

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    September 27, 2003: I have read everything that J. Mapson has ever written and I can't get enough - still. I fell for her writing when I read 'Hank and Chloe', savored every word and then read it again. Then I read 'Loving Chloe'...then 'Blue Rodeo' and the others. I read 'Bad Girl Creek' which is the prequel to this, I guess, but you don't have to read it first. These characters, again, stand on their own and I wish they were my girlfriends. I love how she carves these characters out so that you get to know each and every one of them - even the ones who are gone. I would recognize Phoebe and Maddy for sure, if I walk past them on a street anywhere. I know them. That is how I feel about her characters. I write down phrases she concocts that bring tears to my eyes and I send them to friends to entice them to read Mapson's books. I don't want to tell the story here because I could not put it as well as she does. I am ready for some more Bad Girls. Jo-Ann - your books are just better than any words I can ever give to you.....I am out here waiting for more.

    fun and easy to read soap operaby Anonymous

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    December 10, 2002: A year has passed since Phoebe, Ness, Nance, and Beryl moved in together on Phoebe?s California flower farm to help each other overcome or at least deal with health problems and bad relationships (see BAD GIRL CREEK). Phoebe is pregnant, but the father died in a car crash on their wedding day. Ness has been diagnosed as HIV positive. Nance is heading to the altar, as she will marry Phoebe?s brother though she believes she still loves music reporter Rick. Beryl still recovers from accidentally killing her spouse, spending time in jail, and what seems to her is unrequited love for Earl. Maddy leaves Nebraska, ditching her singing partner boyfriend who is drunk one time to many, to visit Oklahoma City, where her twin sister died in the Bombing. She meets Rick and they make love before traveling together to Santa Fe. At a performance in Santa Fe Maddy meets Beryl and Earl. Together everyone goes to Bad Girl Creek for the wedding. In spite of the major flaws of the key nine characters that make up this baseball team, the cast is a sweet bunch struggling to overcome their problems through this loose association. The story line is fun and easy to read, but keep score because the changing points of view and the hard to distinguish much of the protagonists make for a difficult time remember who has what. Somewhat soap opera in nature, the middle tale of Jo-Ann Mapson?s trilogy will delight her fans and those who desire a cautionary tale brimming with muted optimism. Harriet Klausner