A Cellarful of Marmalade
A novel by Margaret Hubbard
The white house, facing the wrong way, stands high on a hill. For 150 years it has been lived in by an array of characters. Two old sisters who learned to read in exchange for teaching sewing, a little girl who explored a magical path, a young man who went to the First World War and a hard bitten submariner who came back from the second, a young engineer who went to America for two years and stayed there for over forty, but for whom this house was always home.
Beth begins the story in the present day, and then time slides into the early years of the house in the mid-nineteenth century. Family by family they come alive, each facing the challenges of their time.
Beth’s life has been very different. What does she have in common with the people who lived here before her? Much more than you might expect.
Watching and protecting those who love it is the house; always white, sometimes with a grey trim, sometimes blue. It listens, and occasionally it nudges characters into action. Its garden stretches towards the river; a world of potatoes and roses, as varied as the people who cultivated it.
The story goes beyond the house into the community, and the national and international events which touch the lives of those who have lived there.
And then there is the marmalade, from an old recipe handed down one generation to the next. Its smells and its colours belong to Spain, but lives, surrounded by books, in a cellar where a silver jeweller works her craft.
'A Cellarful of Marmalade' begins in the present, goes back into the past, and in returning to the starting point looks at the opportunities and the challenges, the hopes and the fears of different generations. The old walls listened to their stories and shared their dreams.
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Reviews
“This book is an extraordinary combination of dilligent historic research plus a lovely reimagining of the conversations that would have taken place withingn the walls of that house. One of the thngs that struck me as I was reading was in the telling of this story - a deeply private relationship with a place that has now emerged in print to enrich so many others.”
— Rachel S, Derbyshire
“I very much enjoyed this book . So well written and engaging--brilliant to make it about the house and then the people in it-- rather than a different kind of memoir or creative non-fiction. It works very effectively to keep the balance between a place, families, and history. It is a delightful read.”
— Diane
“I was just so impressed with this book. The house became a living, breathing character with its own emotions. When I tell people about it, which is often, I say that the author describes how vital it is to have a sense of place and to find how to adapt oneself to it and to be faithful to it.
It was so wonderful to see the lives of the various tenants unfold and to understand the connections between them in the actions and reactions of the various characters. They became real to me and I rejoiced or grieved along with them. I had great sympathy for the Misses Cook and I was so sorry for the three boys who never returned home. They were blessed with such youthful joy, unaware of life's pitfalls that lay ahead, as are so many people in actuality.
As I read the book, I noted several elegant phrases and the skillful use of words. I look forward to re-reading the biography of this house and its tenants.”
— Allan