and some reviews . . . .
SF Gate (San Francisco): " In the end, she offers a cautionary tale about what happens to kids who've grown without families, one that strives to be honest but still hopeful. Children like Victoria may be able to survive on their own, but in order to do better than that - to thrive - they need support. But it's never too late to learn how to love."
New York Times :"At first blush it sounds like something Dickens might have come up with, had Dickens been deeply interested in flower arranging"
the Globe & Mail: "In this absorbing and delicately wrought debut novel, Diffenbaugh heeds the creative-writing maxim: Write what you know. She has been a foster mother and has taught art and writing in low-income communities. This experience is discernible in The Language of Flowers. The idea that an angry young girl such as Victoria would actually be interested in flowers and their meanings seems implausible on one level, and yet Diffenbaugh uses to good effect the belief that evergreen hope lies nascent within most damaged kids."
Kate Greenaway's Language of Flowers, 1884 the author's inspiration for the novel |
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