Ivy Lane: Part 1: Spring, Part 1

· Random House
4.3
13 reviews
Ebook
108
Pages
Eligible
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About this ebook

Friendship blossoms at Ivy Lane...
Tilly Parker needs a fresh start, fresh air and a fresh attitude if she is ever to leave the past behind and move on with her life. As she settles in to a new town seeking peace and solitude, taking on her own plot at Ivy Lane allotments seems like the perfect solution. But the vibrant, friendly Ivy Lane community has other ideas and endeavour to entice Tilly into seedling swaps and Easter egg hunts. Can Tilly let new friends into her life, or will she stay a wallflower for good?
Ivy Lane is a serialized novel told in four parts – taking you through a year in the life of Tilly Parker – beginning with Spring.
Each part of Ivy Lane is approx. 10 chapters.


Praise for Cathy Bramley:
'A witty, laugh-out-loud romantic comedy with a protagonist you'll love and I highly recommend it!' Miranda Dickinson
'The Ivy Lane series is such a clever little idea... It took me an hour or so to read and it was delightful! I very much look forward to the three other Ivy Lane novellas. I loved Tilly and I can’t wait to read more from her!' Chick Lit Reviews & News
'Full of LOL moments with tenderness that can leave your eyes filled with tears' Room for Reading
'Cute, charming and very, very funny... similar in feel to the books by Lindsey Kelk and Abby Clements' Page to Stage Reviews

Ratings and reviews

4.3
13 reviews
Midge Odonnell
April 2, 2019
This is quite a fun and light hearted read that I found easy to pick up in odd moments whilst on holiday recently. It is one of those strange books where nothing really happens but everything happens; if you know what I mean. Unfortunately, I found that some of what did happen just stretched my belief too far and I am still trying to figure out what Tilly and Aidan saw in each other and why they both seem to feel they have this grand, fated attraction to each other - it doesn't tally with their personalities and the "romance" doesn't so much blossom as go from seedling to full bloom in less than the blink of an eye. Very peculiar and it did spoil my overall enjoyment of the book. The characters in the book are really wonderfully crafted and feel like real people, with all their foibles and biases. The author even allows them to express parts of themselves that we like to keep hidden - ingrained prejudices, judgement of others, selfishness - without turning them in to monsters. I don't think there was one character in the book that I didn't like. Charlie is a good case study of character - it would have been so easy to turn him to some kind of stalkery monster but he is completely empathetic and the damage his spouse did to him looms so large that you actually understand why he acts as he does. It doesn't excuse his actions but it explains them and the reader is left to judge him and I liked that I wasn't told explicitly how to feel about this character. It is clear from the start that we are supposed to root for Tilly and, to some extent, I did. Luckily I have never been in her situation and found myself unable to put myself in to her shoes as I just felt there was some disconnect between reader and character. She always felt a little like a set of circumstances rather than a person, which is a real shame as the book hinges on her character and she was perhaps the least believable of the lot (except for the god-like Aidan). I did enjoy the way the author linked the growth of the allotments through the seasons to the people Ivy Lane Allotments are populated with. It was subtly handled and you don't really realise it until after you have finished reading that the book is full of metaphor and parallels between the produce and the people. There is also no shying away from the natural cycle of birth and death in the book and all the little pieces of ourselves we lose inbetween. There are also a few, admittedly small, plot inconsistencies that are no doubt down to this being previously released as a four part serialisation. The most glaring is that there are plots free on the allotment and then in another quarter there is suddenly a waiting list for people to join despite the empty plots. For some reason this irrationally annoyed me. Not the best Cathy Bramley I have read but it is warm and funny and I did enjoy it (on the whole).
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Uswatun Hasanah
August 2, 2024
Loved it! The storyline is different, and so, kept me curious. Also, quite relatable, somehow. A warm kind of story. 🥰 Is that even make sense?
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Becci Mathews
February 23, 2023
Brilliant! Light-hearted, funny and just enough intrigue to keep you reading!
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About the author

Cathy Bramley is the Sunday Times bestselling author of romantic comedies including Wickham Hall, The Lemon Tree Café, Hetty's Farmhouse Bakery and A Match Made in Devon. She lives in a Nottinghamshire village with her family.

Her recent career as a full-time writer of light-hearted, romantic fiction has come as somewhat of a lovely surprise after spending eighteen years running her own marketing agency. However, she has been always an avid reader, never without a book on the go and now thinks she may have found her dream job!

Cathy loves to hear from her readers. You can get in touch via her website or on social media.

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