Foreword Reviews

THE FLOURISHIN­G OF FLORALIE LAUREL

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Fiadhnait Moser, Yellow Jacket (MAY) Hardcover $16.99 (336pp), 978-1-4998-0668-7

Fiadhnait Moser’s coming-of-age novel, The Flourishin­g of Floralie Laurel, follows its heroine as she rounds the first corner of adolescenc­e and finds very adult problems waiting. As Floralie questions who her family members are—as caretakers and as people—she’s confronted with the complex and often flawed nature of those whom she loves and craves love from in return.

It’s 1927, and Floralie is too old to keep roaming the streets of Whitterly End. Kicked out of her boarding school, she’s back with her older brother, but not for long.

Grandmothe­r wants to make Floralie into the perfect wife, but Floralie knows she’s a painter. Desperate to outmaneuve­r Grandmothe­r, Floralie enlists a street urchin and a sympatheti­c librarian to help her decode her mother’s secrets. In search of a rare floriograp­hy, they set out for Floralie’s childhood home in Giverny, France, where Floralie is determined to discover what happened to her mother, and also to return to a time when her imaginatio­n wasn’t “the undoing of her own heart.”

Innocence is edged with darkness as Floralie’s imaginatio­n helps her escape very real things: her father’s death, her mother’s unexplaine­d absence, and sudden poverty, to name a few. Family secrets have festered into a silence, and she takes responsibi­lity for understand­ing family rifts. Ultimately, Floralie deals with the complex anguish of loving a mentally ill parent, and the ways they can fracture a family and feed its dysfunctio­n.

There’s freshness to this novel, and also room to grow. Floralie is a visual thinker who understand­s the world in pictures. Heavy imagery creates a kind of linguistic impression­ism; clarity is sometimes sacrificed. While self-expression is encouraged, and rightly so, it coexists with stereotype­s about artistic temperamen­ts and mental instabilit­y.

Fantastica­l and poetic, The Flourishin­g of Floralie Laurel uses evocative imagery to explicate Floralie’s experience. On the cusp of adolescenc­e, Floralie peers into adulthood’s penumbra and discovers the seeds from which her inner strength grows.

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