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    The Orange Blossom Special

    4.5 2

    by Betsy Carter


    Paperback

    (Reprint)

    $12.00
    $12.00

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    • ISBN-13: 9780385339766
    • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
    • Publication date: 05/28/2006
    • Edition description: Reprint
    • Pages: 304
    • Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.39(h) x 0.68(d)

    Betsy Carter is the author of The Orange Blossom Special and her memoir, Nothing to Fall Back On, which was a national bestseller. She is a contributing editor for O, The Oprah Magazine and writes for Good Housekeeping and New York magazine, among others. Carter formerly served as an editor at Esquire, Newsweek, and Harper’s Bazaar, and was the founding editor of New York Woman. She lives in New York City.

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    The Orange Blossom Special


    By Betsy Carter

    Random House

    Betsy Carter
    All right reserved.

    ISBN: 0385339763


    Chapter One

    ONE

    The morning after the letter arrived, Tessie Lockhart dressed with care in a navy blue skirt, red cinch belt, and blue-and-white-striped cotton blouse. Instead of letting her hair lie limp around her shoulders, as she had since Jerry died, she pinned it up in a French twist. And for the first time in God knows how long, she stood in front of the mirror and put on the bright red lipstick that had sat unused in her drawer for nearly three years. She penciled on some eyeliner and even dabbed on Jean Nate.

    Jerry died two and a half years earlier and Tessie hadn't given her appearance a second thought since. When he was alive, he would stroke her hair and tell her that she looked pretty, like the actress Joanne Woodward. He even nicknamed her Jo. She'd never fallen under a man's gaze quite that way, and though she'd studied pictures of Joanne Woodward in the movie magazines and even started wearing her hair in a pony tail the way Joanne Woodward did, Tessie never really saw the resemblance. Not that it mattered. Just the look in Jerry's eyes when he would say, "God, Jo, you are so beautiful," that and the way he'd pull her toward him was all the impetus she needed to turn up the collars of her shirtwaist dresses, and wear her bangs short just like Joanne Woodward had worn hers in a movie magazine photo spread.

    Shetold her boss that she had to go see Dinah's teacher at school and would be away for a couple of hours. Instead, she got on the bus and went to Morris Library at Southern Illinois University. She'd gone by it hundreds of times in the past thirty-six years, but had never set foot inside. Never had any need to. Now she ran up the stairs as if she were coming home.

    Going to Morris Library filled her with a purpose that seemed worth primping for. Besides, she knew there'd be mostly young people there, and she still had enough vanity in her not to want to be seen as old.

    "I've forgotten, but where is the travel section?" Tessie asked the young woman behind the front desk. "One flight up," she answered, without looking up from her filing.

    Approximately 449,280 minutes after her father died, Dinah Lockhart brought home a letter that her teacher had written to her mother. The word PERSONAL was written on it in small block print
    .
    "What's this?" Tessie asked.

    "Who knows?" Dinah shrugged, as her mother took a kitchen knife and slit open the envelope.
    Dinah knew. It was a letter from her seventh-grade teacher, Mr.Silver.

    Tessie read each word carefully, her lips moving imperceptibly.

    Dinah watched her mother struggle with the words, holding the note, written on lined loose-leaf paper, at arm's length. She could see the vein over her mother's left eye start to pulse, the way it did when she felt anxious.
    "'. . . crying in class . . . distracted and disinterested . . . the seriousness of the situation . . . our recommendation that you seek counseling for her . . .'"

    Tessie had noticed how Dinah talked in a monotone voice and how she never seemed to be completely there. But she hadn't connected it to the truth: that Dinah was lost. No friends, no language to put to her feelings, no way to help herself. "Distracted and disinterested," Mr. Silver had said.

    "You cry in class?" she asked her daughter.

    "Yeah, sometimes."
    "How come?"

    "Can't help it."

    Tessie stared at her daughter, her beautiful thirteen-year-old daughter with the red ringlets and shiny face, and saw the pleading eyes of a child about to be hit. She was not a woman likely to make hasty decisions, but as she read the teacher's words, she was struck by one unequivocal thought: We have got to get out of here.

    Tessie knew without knowing how that leaving Carbondale was the right thing. She couldn't spend another day selling dresses at Angel's. The smell of cheap synthetics filled her breathing in and out, even when she wasn't in the store. Only the taste of Almaden Chianti could wipe it out. The sweet grapey Almaden, which she had taken to buying by the case, was her gift to herself for getting through another day of assuring customers that "no, you don't look like a gosh darn barn in that pleated skirt." Just four sips. She'd have four sips as soon as she came home from work. Right before dinner, there'd be another four sips and a couple more during dinner, and so the Chianti got doled out through the evening in small, not particularly worrisome portions. It got so that she was finishing a bottle every other night. When she'd go to buy another case at the liquor store, Mr. Grayson always greeted her the same way. "Howdy do, Tessie. You wouldn't be here for another case of Almaden Chianti, would you?"

    Embarrassed that he noticed, Tessie would bow her head and pretend to be making a decision. "Hmm, sounds like a good idea. Might as well have some extra on hand for company." Of course the last time Tessie had had company was back when Jerry was alive.
    We have got to get out of here. The words moved into Tessie's head, each letter taking on a life of its own-arches, rolling valleys, looping and diving until they sat solid like gritted teeth. She thought about their desolate dinners-macaroni and cheese or one of those new frozen meals. She'd ask Dinah how school was. "Fine" was always what she got back. Then she'd claim to have a lot of homework. Tessie would light her after-dinner cigarette, and the two of them would retreat to their rooms. Tessie's only solace was talking to her dead husband. "What she needs is a fresh start," she would whisper to Jerry. "What we both need is a fresh start."
    We have got to get out of here. The sentence buzzed inside her like a neon light.

    Tessie and Jerry Lockhart had spent their honeymoon in St. Augustine, Florida, seventeen years earlier, in 1941. It was the only time in her life that Tessie had ever left Carbondale. The memory of that had all but faded except for the sight of Spanish moss draped over live oak trees like a wedding veil. She had never seen anything so beautiful.

    Although the ads for Florida always claimed that it was so, she never really believed that it would be warm enough to swim in the ocean at Christmastime-until she was there, and then it was. So different from Carbondale, with its gray winters and ornate Victorian houses always reminding her what was out of reach.

    She checked out every book about Florida that was available in Morris Library. She balanced the giant atlas on her knees and, using St. Augustine as the starting point, made a circle with her fingers north to Jacksonville, west to Tallahassee, and south to Sarasota. As she leafed through the reference books and read about the cities on the map, she found herself staring at pictures of Alachua County, swampy Alachua County, where the sun shining through the moss- covered oaks cast a filigree shadow on the boggy earth. Alachua County, whose name came from the Seminole-Creek word meaning "jug," which referred to a large sinkhole that eventually formed a prairie.
    "What a beautiful place," she thought to herself, pushing aside any doubts about an area that was essentially named after a sinkhole. Then she read that Gainesville, in the heart of that county, was home to one of the largest universities in the United States. Pictures of the redbrick Century Tower at the University of Florida reminded her how much she liked being part of a college town. It gave her status, she thought. People in Carbondale assumed other people in Carbondale had been schooled there, or were in some way a part of the university. She liked the exposure that Dinah got to higher education, and it thrilled her that Dinah might be the first in their family to go to college.

    Could Gainesville be the place? she wondered.

    Just by asking the question, she knew she'd already answered it.

    That night she would tell Dinah how they would leave by Christmas and that she would begin 1959 in a new school.

    Dinah Lockhart never made a precise effort to tally up the number of cigarettes her mother smoked each day, or how many minutes it had been since her father's death. She knew these things instinctively, the way she knew to avoid stepping on cracks and knew to lift her feet and make a wish whenever her mother drove over railroad tracks. She wasn't superstitious exactly, but why risk it?

    Things had been taken away from Dinah, so the things that were there counted. Things like the fourteen honey-locust trees and sixty-two squares of sidewalk on her block.


    Excerpted from The Orange Blossom Special by Betsy Carter Excerpted by permission.
    All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
    Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

    Reading Group Guide

    By turns humorous and deeply moving, The Orange Blossom  Special is the perfect novel for anyone who has ever felt he or she needed a second chance at life. In 1958, recent widow Tessie Lockhart and her thirteen-year-old daughter, Dinah, decide to up and move from Carbondale, Illinois, to Florida, hoping for a fresh start.  Their lives soon intertwine with Gainesville's well-known Landy family, as Dinah befriends her classmate Crystal Landy and eventually forms a special bond with Crystal's older brother, Charlie.  When the Landys' house burns down in a tragic fire that takes the life of Mr. Landy, the rest of the family realizes that their lives will never be the same. 

    Through decades of social turbulence, the author poignantly  portrays the powerful sense of hope and perseverance of her characters as they seek comfort in the unlikeliest of strangers, who soon transform into one family.
     
    The questions, discussion topics, and author biography that follow are intended to enhance your reading of Betsy Carter's The Orange Blossom Special. We hope they enrich your experience of this heartwarming novel.

    1. The Orange Blossom Special refers to the first passenger train to connect New York to Miami, but it can also be seen as an overarching symbol in the context of this story. Thematically, what does it represent to Tessie and Dinah? To Victoria and Reggie? How can it be seen as a symbol of the American Dream?

    2. What do you think of Tessie's somewhat hasty decision to leave her past behind in search of a new start down South? Do you think her decision was in the best interest of her daughter's well-being?

    3. Once settled in Gainesville, both Tessie and Dinah develop ways to keep the memory of their dead husband and father, respectively, alive. Compare and contrast the way they are able to deal with their loss. Why do you think each keeps her method secret from the other?

    4. From the first day of school Dinah seems to have an instant connection with Eddie Fingers. Describe their relationship. Every time Eddie flashed Dinah a certain number of fingers, she believed it was her dad talking to her. What do you think Eddie thought when Dinah would flash her fingers back at him?

    5. How does each of the members of the Landy family deal with Maynard's death? Do you think Crystal and Dinah are able to strengthen their friendship because of it? How?

    6. After her husband's death, Victoria Landy seems to find comfort and a sense of belonging in the unlikeliest of people. Why are J. Baldy and Sonia so important in her life? It seems she tries to ease the pain she suffers on the inside by perfecting herself on the outside. Does she ever find solace in this form of grieving?

    7. Victoria believes that in some way widowhood has made her more compassionate. Do you agree? Though she saw Reggie as a hopeless and disgusting man, she somehow believed that "if she could fix [him], maybe it was possible that she could fix herself" (Chapter 13). How does their relationship grow over the course of the novel? What do they learn from each other? Do you think Reggie changes for the better? Why or why not?

    8. At first glance, Tessie and Barone appear to be very different, but they are able to form a very strong and stable bond. How do their past experiences help forge such a profound understanding of each another?

    9. The novel itself is divided into four distinct parts, each labeled with a different year. How does the author use the 1960s, full of social change, to strengthen the story? Describe the ways in which the civil rights movement and the politics surrounding the Vietnam War are woven throughout the novel, asserting their power to change even the most stubborn characters. Which character(s) seem to be the most affected by the political changes that occur throughout the story? Why?

    10. How does the Vietnam War change Charlie's outlook on life and his relationship with those he is closest to? How does the author use the power of suffering to truly bring people together in a way that nothing else can?

    11. Think about the different mother-child relationships presented in this story. How does Tessie and Dinah’s relationship compare to that of Victoria and Crystal’s and to Victoria and Charlie’s? As the novel progresses, the most meaningful relationships seem to form between characters who are not related. Do you think these non-biological bonds are more telling? Why or why not?

    Introduction

    By turns humorous and deeply moving, The Orange Blossom  Special is the perfect novel for anyone who has ever felt he or she needed a second chance at life. In 1958, recent widow Tessie Lockhart and her thirteen-year-old daughter, Dinah, decide to up and move from Carbondale, Illinois, to Florida, hoping for a fresh start.  Their lives soon intertwine with Gainesville's well-known Landy family, as Dinah befriends her classmate Crystal Landy and eventually forms a special bond with Crystal's older brother, Charlie.  When the Landys' house burns down in a tragic fire that takes the life of Mr. Landy, the rest of the family realizes that their lives will never be the same. 

    Through decades of social turbulence, the author poignantly  portrays the powerful sense of hope and perseverance of her characters as they seek comfort in the unlikeliest of strangers, who soon transform into one family.
     
    The questions, discussion topics, and author biography that follow are intended to enhance your reading of Betsy Carter's The Orange Blossom Special. We hope they enrich your experience of this heartwarming novel.

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    Carbondale, Illinois. 1958. For widowed Tessie Lockhart, booking two seats on a passenger train to Florida symbolizes a fresh start, far from her memories of love and loss. For Tessie’s teenage daughter Dinah, who misses her father terribly, the move to Gainesville means a new school and the painful ordeal of making new friends. Rich, popular Crystal Landy is one of the first girls Dinah meets—and it will be Crystal, along with her exquisite mother, Victoria, who will transform the Lockharts’ lives in ways they never could have imagined. For as war and change come to this small southern town, the bonds between mothers and daughters will be tested, friendships sealed, secrets revealed, and relationships forever altered by the turbulence of the coming decades.

    Wise, moving, and warmly funny, The Orange Blossom Special, spans twenty years in the lives of an unforgettable cast of characters. Betsy Carter has crafted a powerful, richly rewarding novel about growing up, moving on, and turning strangers into friends.

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    From the Publisher
    [A] high-energy debut novel.” —O, The Oprah Magazine

    “Engrossing…[a] warm, wise book.” —Elle
    Publishers Weekly
    The title of Carter's sympathetic if somewhat contrived debut novel (she's the author of a memoir, Nothing to Fall Back On) refers to the first New York-to-Miami passenger train, a not-so-subtle metaphor for the American dream and the forward march of history, as the story hurtles from the late '50s and into the '80s. In 1958, comely widow Tessie Lockhart and her seventh-grade daughter, Dinah, uproot from Carbondale, Ill., to Gainesville, Fla., driven by a very American faith in the healing power of a fresh start. There, their lives intertwine with those of Gainesville's powerful Landy family, as Dinah's popular classmate Crystal Landy and her solemn older brother, Charlie, befriend Dinah. When the Landys' house burns down, killing their father, Dinah and Crystal form a special bond, speaking "the same language of loss" across the divide of class and social status. Even Tessie and supercilious matriarch Victoria Landy cement a rocky friendship, and over the years, a tumultuous love blossoms between Dinah and Charlie. Carter's plot skips lightly over the passing decades, which are marked by periodic eruptions of changing culture. Each incident of racial strife or Vietnam tragedy feels forced and representative, though, and as the novel barrels into the late-20th century like the titular locomotive, Carter sacrifices character development in her reach for historical import. Agent, Kathy Robbins. (June) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
    Kirkus Reviews
    From journalist/memoirist Carter (Nothing to Fall Back On, 2002), a sweet debut novel about a young widow and her daughter who move to Florida in 1958, searching for warm weather and a new life. Tessie Lockhart looks like Joanne Woodward, works in a dress shop in Carbondale, Ill., and talks daily to her husband Jerry, who's been dead for two and a half years. When a letter arrives from school alerting her to teenaged daughter Dinah's unhappiness, Tessie-whose own formula for getting through the day requires cigarettes and a half bottle of Almaden-pulls out an atlas and decides on Gainesville as the place to start over. The town proves to be a hotbed of charming eccentrics, so our heroines fit right in. Dinah, who thinks her father is communicating with her through an odd classmate called Eddie Fingers, becomes best friends with rich girl Crystal Landy, whose beautiful and amusingly self-indulgent mother has an eye for the young Cuban girl in the local hair salon. Crystal's brother, Charlie, has psychic powers known only to their housekeeper, a woman devoted to Jesus and the novels of Harold Robbins. Tessie lands a receptionist job and a lover: Barone Antonucci, a suave, older, well-to-do man with a hopelessly incapacitated wife. Barone's presence, however, is cleared by Jerry, whom Tessie consults by writing notes, putting them in a small cedar box (aptly named the "Jerry Box") and waiting for a sign. Silly as it all seems, life in Gainesville has its serious moments. As the '50s move into the '60s, the town and the characters undergo changes wrought by history (the Vietnam War, integration) and personal experience (the Landy house burns down, Dinah and Charlie fall in difficult love,Tessie becomes pregnant with Barone's child). But at the close, all the ends are tied up, albeit in a decidedly crooked bow. Odd mix of styles and themes, but nonetheless an endearing portrait of a place and time. Book-of-the-Month Club First Fiction Prize nominee; Book-of-the-Month Club/Doubleday Book Club/Literary Guild selection; author tour

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