Beth Gutcheon author of Saying Grace
  
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Good-bye and Amen

In a summer cottage on the coast of Maine, an unlikely love was nurtured, a marriage endured, and a family survived. Now it is time for the children of that marriage to make peace with the wounds and the treasures left to them. And to sort out which is which.

Beth Gutcheon's critically acclaimed family saga, Leeway Cottage, was a major achievement; a vivid and moving tale of war and marriage and their consequences that enchanted readers. Good-Bye and Amen is the next chapter for the family of Leeway Cottage, the story of what happens when those most powerful people in any family drama, the parents, have left the stage.

The complicated marriage of the gifted Danish pianist, Laurus Moss, to the provincial American child of privilege,  Sydney Brant,  was a mystery to many who knew them, including their three children. Now Eleanor, Monica, and Jimmy Moss have to decide how to divide or share what Laurus and Sydney have left them without losing each other.  Secure and cheerful Eleanor, the eldest, wants little for herself but much for her children. Monica, the least-loved middle child, brings her childhood scars to the table, as well as the baggage of a difficult marriage to the charismatic Norman, who left a brilliant legal career, though not his ambition, to become an Episcopal priest. Youngest and best-loved Jimmy, who made a train wreck of his young adulthood, has returned from a long period of alienation from the family surprisingly intact, but extremely hard for his sisters to read.

Having lived through childhoods both materially blessed and emotionally difficult, with a father who could seem uninvolved and a mother who loved a good family game of "Let's you and him fight," the Mosses have formed strong adult bonds that none of them want to damage. But it's difficult to divide a beloved summer house three ways and keep it too. They all know what's at stake - in a world of atomized families, a house like Leeway Cottage can be the glue that keeps generations of cousins and grandchildren deeply connected to each other. But knowing it's important doesn't make it easy.

 

 
Leeway Cottage Beth Gutcheon
Leeway Cottage 
By Beth Gutcheon

Now available in paperback from HarperPerennial.

In this beautifully written tour de force of a novel, Beth Gutcheon takes readers back to the coastal village of Dundee, Maine. There, in a Victorian summer house called Leeway Cottage, we witness the scenes of a long 20th century marriage.

In April of 1940, as the Nazis march into Denmark, a rich girl of the Dundee summer colony named Sydney Brant marries a gifted Danish pianist, Laurus Moss. They believe they know each other, but do they? Laurus’s beloved family is in Copenhagen, hostage to what the fortunes of Hitler’s war will bring, especially as his mother is Jewish. When Laurus chooses to leave her in the fall of 1941, to help build a Danish Resistance from London, Sydney is dismayed. By the time they are reunited four years later, Laurus’s family and the reader have been through one of the most stirring stories of the war, Denmark’s courageous grass-roots rescue of virtually all 7,000 of the country’s Jews. Sydney has lead a group knitting for the war effort, and had a baby.

In the decades to come, many people, especially their three grown children, will wonder if these two very different people understand each other at all. If they do, how do they stay together? Laurus likes to claim that in heaven you get to see the movie of your life, with all the blanks filled in. Sydney fears what he might see and why he wants to know; their children fear he’ll die and there won’t be any movie.

But there will be.

Leeway Cottage History
Leeway Cottage Research
Leeway Cottage Bibliography
An Interview with Beth Gutcheon
Leeway Cottage Reading Group Guide
Leeway Cottage – Comments From Early Readers