In Sunlight, in a Beautiful Garden

An Elegantly Crafted Love Story Set in Post-Civil War America

In Sunlight, In a Beautiful Garden tells of a bittersweet romance set against the backdrop of the greatest industrial disaster in American history: the construction and subsequent collapse in 1889 of the Johnstown, Pennsylvania, dam. It was a tragedy that cost 2,200 lives, implicated some of the most illustrious financiers of the day - Andrew Carnegie, Henry Clay Frick, and Andrew Mellon - whose carelessness contributed to the disaster, and irreparably changed the lives of those who survived it.

This is the story of these men and of the families who lived in the shadow of the dam: the daughter of the lawyer who filed the charter for an exclusive club on the shore of the artificially created lake; the Quaker steel mill owner who tried to stop the dam's construction; a librarian, escaping to a bustling mountain city from a loveless life in Boston; a young man determined to expose and undermine the greed and carelessness that shaped the last years of the nineteenth century.

A cautionary tale for our new century, In Sunlight, In a Beautiful Garden is a story of youthful promise and devastating loss, of power and its misuse, and of greed and the philanthropy that is too often a guilty by-product.

1100600157
In Sunlight, in a Beautiful Garden

An Elegantly Crafted Love Story Set in Post-Civil War America

In Sunlight, In a Beautiful Garden tells of a bittersweet romance set against the backdrop of the greatest industrial disaster in American history: the construction and subsequent collapse in 1889 of the Johnstown, Pennsylvania, dam. It was a tragedy that cost 2,200 lives, implicated some of the most illustrious financiers of the day - Andrew Carnegie, Henry Clay Frick, and Andrew Mellon - whose carelessness contributed to the disaster, and irreparably changed the lives of those who survived it.

This is the story of these men and of the families who lived in the shadow of the dam: the daughter of the lawyer who filed the charter for an exclusive club on the shore of the artificially created lake; the Quaker steel mill owner who tried to stop the dam's construction; a librarian, escaping to a bustling mountain city from a loveless life in Boston; a young man determined to expose and undermine the greed and carelessness that shaped the last years of the nineteenth century.

A cautionary tale for our new century, In Sunlight, In a Beautiful Garden is a story of youthful promise and devastating loss, of power and its misuse, and of greed and the philanthropy that is too often a guilty by-product.

42.99 In Stock
In Sunlight, in a Beautiful Garden

In Sunlight, in a Beautiful Garden

by Kathleen Cambor

Narrated by James Daniels

Unabridged — 10 hours, 24 minutes

In Sunlight, in a Beautiful Garden

In Sunlight, in a Beautiful Garden

by Kathleen Cambor

Narrated by James Daniels

Unabridged — 10 hours, 24 minutes

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Overview

An Elegantly Crafted Love Story Set in Post-Civil War America

In Sunlight, In a Beautiful Garden tells of a bittersweet romance set against the backdrop of the greatest industrial disaster in American history: the construction and subsequent collapse in 1889 of the Johnstown, Pennsylvania, dam. It was a tragedy that cost 2,200 lives, implicated some of the most illustrious financiers of the day - Andrew Carnegie, Henry Clay Frick, and Andrew Mellon - whose carelessness contributed to the disaster, and irreparably changed the lives of those who survived it.

This is the story of these men and of the families who lived in the shadow of the dam: the daughter of the lawyer who filed the charter for an exclusive club on the shore of the artificially created lake; the Quaker steel mill owner who tried to stop the dam's construction; a librarian, escaping to a bustling mountain city from a loveless life in Boston; a young man determined to expose and undermine the greed and carelessness that shaped the last years of the nineteenth century.

A cautionary tale for our new century, In Sunlight, In a Beautiful Garden is a story of youthful promise and devastating loss, of power and its misuse, and of greed and the philanthropy that is too often a guilty by-product.


Editorial Reviews

bn.com

The Barnes & Noble Review
In her elegantly crafted second novel, Kathleen Cambor lives up to the promise reflected in her graceful debut, The Book of Mercy, taking readers inside the minds and hearts of people living on the verge of doom. In Sunlight, in a Beautiful Garden is set in Johnstown, Pennsylvania in 1899; there, on Memorial Day weekend, 2,200 lives were lost when heavy rains caused the South Fork Dam to burst, releasing a thunderous wall of water that crashed down upon the valley 450 feet below. But if the forces causing the Johnstown Flood were natural, the agencies that brought about the devastation of the city were human.

The South Fork Dam was the property of the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club, which, despite repeated warnings, neglected to make the necessary repairs to ensure the dam's stability. As Cambor explores the lives of the club's elite members, such as the industrialists Henry Clay Frick, Andrew Carnegie, and Andrew Mellon, blame mounts like the ultimate death toll. "These men who kept obsessive track of all their holdings, their vast properties," writes Cambor, "had no interest in the safety or the structure of the dam. It was as if no people lived below it, no world existed in the mountains but the one they were creating." But Cambor avoids demonizing the moguls, painting them in an utterly human light; we encounter them as characters whose hopes have been squelched by obligation to family, as lovers hollowed by loss, and as new men haunted by past failures.

Likewise, in Johnstown, although there are many victims, there are few innocents. Frank Fallon, a Civil War veteran and foreman at the Cambria Iron Company, lusts for Grace McIntyre, a librarian with a secret past -- and his troubled wife's best friend. And although Fallon's son Daniel is in love with Nora Talbot, a naturalist (and member of the elite club upstream), he nevertheless sleeps with a secretary at the mill to acquire records of the deaths and maimings that occurred there.

Death and loss -- through epidemics, war, and gruesome accidents -- are a constant in the lives of these characters. Cambor drives at meaning through her characters' struggles, for every glimpse of their suffering and every fleeting moment of ease is tinted with dark foreknowledge of the apocalypse to come. Her characters are flooded with memories that both preserve and warp their histories, forever haunting their spirits even in the act of healing. With In Sunlight, in a Beautiful Garden, Kathleen Cambor reveals not only the devastating fragility of life but also the unseen fault lines beneath the surface of the human heart. (Elise Vogel)

Elise Vogel is a freelance writer living in New York City.

Denise Kersten

Cambor's exquisite prose is the spoonful of sugar that makes this lesson in history bittersweet. She writes of their lives before the flood, filling in history's gaps with emotions and personalities, only reaching the catastrophe and its aftermath in the last chapters.
USA Today

Jabari Asim

It can't be easy to sustain the suspense in a novel where the resolution is foreordained, but Cambor acquits herself admirably....[W]hole personalities emerge in succinct strokes. The dynamics of father-daughter relationships seem to exert a particular hold on Cambor's imagination, and her portrayal of them seems both sympathetic and knowing.
Washington Post

Kirkus Reviews

A great fictional subject is given impressive full-scale treatment in Cambor's strong second novel (after The Book of Mercy, 1996). The Johnstown Flood of 1889 remains lodged in the American imagination as the classic example of a disaster that need not have occurred. It did, though, because the builders of a lavish estate in Pennsylvania's Allegheny Mountains, commissioned by Andrew Carnegie and his fellow plutocrats (the South Fork Hunting and Fishing Club), arrogantly tempted fate and ignored numerous warnings that an aging, improperly maintained dam could not withstand unusually heavy rains ("It was as if no people lived below it, no world existed in the mountains but the one they were creating"). In a richly detailed fusion of history and fiction, Cambor explores the lives of such historical figures as the Scottish-born Carnegie himself (an industrialist with the soul of an aesthete), his ruthlessly pragmatic CEO Henry Clay Frick, and tenderhearted, philanthropic Andrew Mellon, juxtaposed against those of several strikingly vivid invented characters. The latter include Civil War veteran Frank Fallon, steel mill foreman and stoical patriarch of a stricken family; his"hollowed, fractured, parched" wife Julia, who seeks consolation for her sorrows in a loving friendship with Johnstown librarian Grace McIntyre, the independent woman to whom Frank is also drawn; their son Daniel, torn between his hunger for learning and his"radical" sympathies with exploited laborers; Nora Talbot, whose secretive trysts with Daniel both distract and quicken her passionate scientific interests; and Nora's father James, the Virginian attorney who will waste his life in frustrated efforts to make theSouthFork magnates pay for their neglect. The scenes involving these characters are without exception amply imagined and beautifully written; their counterparts, focused on the imperious captains of industry"above" their unfortunate neighbors, are too often flatly accusatory and crammed with only partially dramatized historical information. Very nearly a wonderful novel, nevertheless, and clear proof that Cambor is one of the more interesting and unpredictable of our contemporary writers.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940172637674
Publisher: Brilliance Audio
Publication date: 08/25/2005
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

Chapter One

Memorial Day, 1889

"Nature's law is that all things change and turn, and pass away..."
--Marcus Aurelius, Meditations, Book XII, Number 21

Frank Fallon lay awake after a night of dozing, waking, dozing again. A night of restlessness. A night of decisions.

Each of the two bedroom windows of his house on Vine Street was opened a crack, just enough to let in the first spring air. May nights in the mountains. Air with a freshness to it. As if, finally, it really was going to bring a change of seasons. As if it might bring rain.

Frank's hands were clasped behind his head, his eyes long grown accustomed to the silver-blue darkness. Eight years in this house, he knew it well: the way the floorboard creaked on the third stair, the nighttime sound of brick-and-plaster sighing and settling into itself. There was a porch and parlor, three good-sized bedrooms, a bay window in the dining room. A sycamore tree stood grandly in the back yard, bringing welcome shade in the summer. Wayward branches touched the house possessively. Downstairs, Frank knew, the pies Julia made at midnight sat on the kitchen table, and fat lemons filled a glass bowl, waiting to be squeezed. The iron skillet had already been placed on the stovetop, and on its seasoned surface chicken would be fried as soon as dawn broke, so it had time to cool before the parade and picnic. It seemed an odd thing to him, the idea of picnicking at the cemetery, an old rough blanket spread across the graves.

"But that'sexactly the point," Julia always reminded him. Memorial Day, she said. A day for being with them, for remembering the dead.

As if anything about Frank's life allowed him to forget.

From downstairs he heard the sound of the piano. Julia, restless too, trying to ease herself, to pass the night by playing. It was one of the first things he had given her, four years after they were married. He knew that she had had one as a girl in Illinois, a rosewood Chickering, a stylish square piano with intricately carved legs and scrolled lyres. So for four years he'd saved money in a sock. Three days a week he gave up his stop at California Tom's on Market Street, gave up the shot of whiskey that cut so cleanly through the phlegm and grit that always clogged his throat at the end of his shift. For four years, three days a week, he gave up the quick camaraderie with friends, the talk that was impossible on the mill floor, where your very life depended on concentration, focus, where the screech of the Bessemer blow, the wild vibration of machinery drowned out every other sound. Finally, $137 accumulated in the sock. In 1869 it had felt like a small fortune.

The piano was a Fischer upright, used, old already when he bought it. The ivory of the keys had aged to a lineny yellow, and spidery cracks marred most of them, as if a small, light-footed bird had left its footprints as it practiced avian scales. But what they found was that the instrument's age, its years of use, had given it an organic, mellow tone. John Schrader, who sold furniture on Clinton Street, came once a year with his pitch pipe and his small felt sack of tools to keep it tuned. The sound of it, and the image that came to Frank's mind as he lay abed and listened -- of Julia sitting on the round stool, leaning earnestly into the keys, eyes closed to better feel the melody -- still had a power over him. After all this time. After everything that had happened.

Frank Fallon was fifty-one years old. And he planned to march, as he did every year, with the Grand Army Veterans. His uniform from the war was folded on a chair beside the bed. The 113th Pennsylvania. He'd retrieved it from the attic trunk the night before, and when he'd taken the jacket by its shoulders and let the careful folds fall from it, he'd thought he could smell Virginia mud on it. Still. Twenty-six years later. There was a tear in the threadbare right pant leg where a Rebel shell had grazed him.

They would begin gathering for the parade at noon. Stores would be closed today, school canceled. Even the iron works was shut down. It cost a lot to let those furnaces sit idle, a rarely heard-of thing.

He did not think much about the war, except on mornings like this when some ritual holiday required it. It had been foggy at Fredericksburg the night before the battle. The picket lines of the Union troops and the Confederates were so close to one another that conversations could be held between sentinels standing guard. It had snowed throughout December, and Frank remembered how cold his ears were, how he kept rubbing at them with his worn wool gloves as he tried to ward off numbness; how he feared the cold, the dimming of cognition and sensation that came with it. At first he thought that the freezing temperature and exhaustion were going to his head, that he was hearing things, when someone with a harmonica started playing "Dixie.

They'd been camped for days, waiting for pontoon bridges to arrive, so they could be placed across the Rappahannock. Around the campfires loose talk flowed easily, full of bravado. Talk about how quickly Fredericksburg would be taken, bets placed on how many weeks would pass before the war ended. Youth and the rightness of their cause had stirred in Frank and in all his Pennsylvania regiment some ennobled sense that God was on their side, a belief that sound planning and foresight had been part of the strategy that had brought them to this place.

As the Union troops moved toward Fredericksburg...

In Sunlight, in a Beautiful Garden. Copyright © by Kathleen Cambor. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

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