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The Garden of Eve [Library Binding]

K. L. Going (Author)
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

Price: $15.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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Library Binding, April 9, 2009 $15.99  
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Book Description

April 9, 2009
Evie reluctantly moves with her widowed father to Beaumont, New York, where he has bought an apple orchard, dismissing rumors that the town is cursed and the trees haven't borne fruit in decades. Evie doesn't believe in things like curses and fairy tales anymore--if fairy tales were real, her mom would still be alive. But odd things happen in Beaumont. Evie meets a boy who claims to be dead and receives a mysterious seed as an eleventh-birthday gift. Once planted, the seed grows into a tree overnight, but only Evie and the dead boy can see it--or go where it leads.
    
The Garden of Eve mixes spine-tingling chills with a deeply resonating story that beautifully explores grief, healing, and growth.
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Believably and with delicacy, Going paints a suspenseful story suffused with the poignant questions of what it means to be alive, and what might wait on the other side."--The Horn Book
"Symbolism abounds in this beautifully written book."--Booklist

--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

About the Author

K. L. GOING is the author of Fat Kid Rules the World, a Michael L. Printz Honor Book; Saint Iggy; and The Liberation of Gabriel King. She lives and writes full-time in Glen Spey, New York.
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Library Binding: 240 pages
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1439594090
  • ISBN-13: 978-1439594094
  • Shipping Information: View shipping rates and policies
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #8,195,479 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

K.L. Going is the award-winning author of books for children and teens. Her first novel, Fat Kid Rules the World was a Michael Printz Honor Book, listed with YALSA's Best Books for Young Adults and their Best Books for the Past Decade. Her books have been Booksense picks, Scholastic Book Club choices, Junior Library Guild selections, NY Public Library Best Books for the Teenage, and winners of state book awards. Her work has been published in Korea, Italy, Japan, Germany, and the UK, and Fat Kid Rules the World will soon be a movie!

K.L. began her career working at one of the oldest literary agencies in New York City. She used this inner knowledge of publishing to write Writing and Selling the Young Adult Novel -- a how-to book for aspiring writers, published by Writer's Digest. She has also written short stories for several anthologies and currently has multiple picture books under contract. She lives in Glen Spey, NY where she both writes and runs a business critiquing manuscripts. She's also an adoring mom.

To visit KL on-line go to www.klgoing.com, www.facebook.com/KLGoing, or find her on Twitter!

 

Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.9 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Courtesy of Teens Read Too, October 10, 2007
This review is from: The Garden of Eve (Hardcover)
Evie's mother used to make up stories for her. They were magical, beautiful, and so terribly missed when her mother died. Evie is miserable without her mother, and her father decides to sell the home their family had once shared and move onto an apple orchard. That only makes life more miserable for Evie.

The apple orchard is grey, the trees are all dead, and they haven't produced fruit in years. Evie's father is busy beyond belief working in the orchard. That leaves Evie with endless hours of time alone. In the cemetery she meets a boy who tells her his name is Alex. Except Alex is the little boy from their new town who died. His gravestone is right there.

Evie begins to spend more and more time with Alex. She also receives a mysterious seed that grows into a tree overnight. And that tree produces apples. Apples that, when bitten, take Evie and Alex to a magical place--lush plants and life are everywhere. It's exactly like the town they live in now, except everything is beautiful. Plants are growing everywhere. Father's orchard is growing well; beautiful curtains are on her house. It is the way it would be if her mother lived there.

Is this the place where her mother told her she'd meet her? She said that after she died, she'd wait for Evie in a beautiful garden. Evie had given up on all of that magic and nonsense. But, maybe, just maybe, she'll find her mother. But why does Alex keep running around? What is it that he's looking for so desperately? And won't her father be worried about her?

Should she stay in this beautiful place? Should she go back? Is this where Alex is supposed to stay? Should she leave without him?

It's difficult to explain the complexity of THE GARDEN OF EVE. It is beautiful, painful, and I wasn't even able to convey the suspense and surprises that fill the pages without giving away too much of the story. This book is sad. It is hopeful. It is magical. This will be another award-winner for the author, K. L. Going.

Reviewed by: Dianna Geers
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Garden of eve, December 11, 2007
A Kid's Review
This review is from: The Garden of Eve (Hardcover)
The author of my book is K.L Going, the title is The Garden Of

Eve. I think the book should fall under the category of being a

fantasy fiction.

The story starts out in Michigan with a father and a daughter who

have just lost his wife, and mother. They move to Beaumont new

York, and move into a knew house. The house is beside a

cemetery and an apple orchard. That is one reason why they

moved, so the father could be a apple farmer. Evie, the daughter,

keeps seeing a boy in the cemetery and she is the only one that can

see him. The boy had just died so she thinks. The townspeople

believe the orchard is cursed. They think this because a guy named

Rodney is buried in it. Rodney gives Evie a seed, but he said to not

plant the seed. Maggie ( Rodney's sister) gives Evie the seed

because Rodney is dead. The story continues into a place that she

and her friend named Alex go when they plant the seed that she

received from Maggie.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Allegorical Apples, January 30, 2008
This review is from: The Garden of Eve (Hardcover)
Dead mothers are always a good plot device. There is nothing like the absence of a mother to create a suitable amount of angst, heartache, uncertainty, and self-doubt. Think of the Alice books by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor, where the first couple of books in the series are driven by the fact that pre-teen Alice is growing up without a mother, surrounded by men in her family, and suffers the nagging fear that she is not approaching the formative years of her life with due female influence. And more recently we have had the mother-less Bee from Being Bee, and Jack from The Night Tourist. Now there is Evie Adler in K.L. Going's The Garden of Eve. Her mother is ten months dead from cancer, and Evie is left with her botanist father who has never appreciated--or even understood--magic the way her mother did. He is too much of a scientist to put much stock in fairy tales, or stories in general. When he takes on the job of trying to revive a dead apple orchard in Beaumont, New York, far from their Michigan home, Evie is resentful. They move into a house right next door to a cemetery--but the only cemetery Evie cares about is the one back in Michigan, where her mother is buried. Her father devotes his time to the orchard--but all Evie can think of is the magic garden she used to plan with her mother, a perfect garden with magnificent trees and noble beasts where the three of them would always be together. When Evie is given a seed supposedly from the Garden of Eden, Evie thinks she has her chance to find that perfect garden, and consequently find her mother, too.

There is a lot going on in this book, some of it allegorical and some of it just old fashioned mystery. There is the boy Alex, whom Evie meets hanging around in the cemetery. Is he really dead, as he claims to be? Is the orchard where Evie's father toils really cursed, or has it simply been abandoned? When Evie plants her seed and enters the magical garden--by way of eating an apple, of course!--is she in Eden or is it a trap? There is another Eve who grew up in Beaumont and disappeared many, many years ago. What happened to her? And will Evie find peace after the death of her mother?

Some of the pieces in the book are tied together a little bit too neatly, but for the most part this is an engaging and thoughtful book. Evie is disillusioned without being broken. The father is pragmatically devoted to his work but all open-hearted and open-minded business when Evie needs him most. The supporting characters range from saintly (the dead mother)to utterly convincing (Alex). Readers who like their books with magic and symbolism will enjoy this.
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The Garden of Eve, The Garden of Ere, Garden of Eden, The Pale Boy, New York, Pieces of the Puzzle, Slowly Evie, The Rest of the Story, The House of Alex Cordez, The Fork, Maggie's Story, Birthday Wishes, Alex the Great, Adam the Great, Aunt Carol, Final Gift, Hidden Treasure, Main Street
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