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Savannah Comes Undone (Savanah Series) [Paperback]

Denise Hildreth Jones (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Savanah Series August 9, 2005

Seeing my mother as the lead story on the six o'clock news was no great cause for alarm...until the camera revealed her chained to a downtown monument!

I thought I knew my mother-but right now I'm not sure I even know myself. I'm currently a journalist for the Savannah Chronicle. And I don't need drama. Really, I can create my own. Who needs extra? But in spite of the mind-boggling events in Savannah this week, the truth is going to be revealed by one of its very own. I am Savannah...from Savannah.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Savannah's mother has chained herself to a monument of the Ten Commandments in front of a federal courthouse in this lighthearted but lackluster follow-up to Savannah from Savannah. Savannah spends most of her time trying to avoid both her mother and the TV cameras aimed in her mother's direction. The standoff between mom, the courts and the ACLU becomes the subject of two newspaper articles in fulfillment of Savannah's new role as human-interest columnist at the Savannah Chronicle. In the course of the week, Savannah also attempts to win back an old love, benefits from a wise stranger's advice, befriends a beauty queen, moves into her own apartment and fights an attraction to the office hottie. Eventually, after some light philosophizing—cue the wise stranger—she makes up with her mom. Hildreth makes Savannah's conflict with her mother the main point of the novel, but doesn't explore that conflict with enough depth. Characters are relatively one-dimensional, and Hildreth occasionally slaughters metaphors ("I tore into that bathroom and scrubbed as if I were an exfoliant attacking a buildup of over-obsessing mothers and apathetic fathers"). Those looking for another installment of Savannah's antics may be disappointed by the slow pace and lack of significant events. (Aug. 11)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Chapter One

My mother is in chains. Chained to what or for what I have no idea. Thomas only said, "Mother is chained to it."

I didn't ask.

I looked down at the denim bow that tied up my wrap dress. It was slightly tilted, so I straightened it. Now, the bow is an amazing accessory, the way it holds things together. Tying a bow is one of the first achievements of childhood. How unfair: a child, learning how to hold things together. I traced the perfectly symmetrical loops with my index fingers. I thought of childhood and sanity.

The phone rang. Again. I jumped. I snatched up my ringing satchel off the hood of Old Betsy and found my phone conveniently resting on the bottom.

"What?"

"Where are you?" my younger brother, Thomas, asked.

"I'm on my way."

"You said that five minutes ago."

I plopped into the driver's seat. "Are you the clock police?"

"Get down here now. Are you a human-interest writer or not?"

"I am and I'm coming. Just take a breather. I'll be there in a minute."

Welcome to my world. The world of Savannah, where a mother in chains for any reason is no great cause for my alarm.

I pointed my declining Saab away from the newspaper office and toward the courthouse. Something off-kilter hovered in the muggy Savannah humidity. Today I suspected something other than the steamy afternoon sun lured people outside their stores, cooling themselves with makeshift fans. I was certain it had to do with "the woman in chains."

A plump, elderly, floral blur almost attached herself to my front bumper. "Watch where you're going!" I hollered at the closed window. She scampered on up the street, oblivious to the fact that she had narrowly escaped a lovebug's fate.

As I tried to pull up to Wright Square--where both Dad's coffee shop and the U.S. Courthouse stand--I encountered an impassable bottleneck of cars, SUVs, trolleys, and a few unhappy horses toting gawking spectators. This jam was a phenomenon not even experienced on parade day, because cars aren't allowed into the historical district on parade day. But today Savannah had apparently plunged into the depths of downright delirium.

I pulled into the covered parking place at the back of Jake's. My little brother (or rather, younger brother; the child stands six feet tall and towers over my five-foot-four-inch frame like a bamboo stalk over a tulip) snatched open the car door.

"Vanni, get out of the car! You've got to get to the courthouse."

"How did you even see me?"

"I've been looking for you for fifteen minutes."

"You only called five minutes ago."

"I called you twice." He grabbed my arm and slammed the door behind me. Thomas, the only one in the world allowed to call me Vanni, dragged me out of the alley and onto the sidewalk in the direction of the courthouse. "What were you doing anyway?"

"I have a job, Thomas. An important job. I have things to finish up before I can just run from my office and jump to the streets."

"Give me a break. You were probably checking your hair."

I would die a thousand deaths before admitting how close he was to the truth.

"Just come on, because you are not going to believe what Mom has done!"

I tried to keep pace with him and actually talk at the same time. "Trust me, I'll believe it. And slow down, I don't run well in heels."

"You shouldn't be wearing heels. The combination is dangerous to society. And trust me, sweet child, you would never have guessed what you're about to see."

We turned the corner and met a scene not witnessed since Tom Hanks sat on a bench and ate a box of chocolates. I could hardly even catch a glimpse of the marble courthouse for the mass of people gathered around something--or dare I say someone--in front of it. ABC and NBC news trucks had arrived. People milled and jabbered like schoolchildren at recess.

We took refuge from the blazing sun with fifteen other shameless gawkers under a live oak near the edge of the square.

"She's in the middle of that, isn't she?"

"You bet your sweet britches she's in the middle of that."

"Does Dad know?"

"Oh yeah, he knows."

"Where is he?"

"He's out there with her."

"Is he angry?"

"Doesn't seem to be."

"Am I going to have to move out of town?"

"Move? Are you kidding? We haven't had this much excitement, since . . . well, since Mom tried to pass that law to neuter all golden retrievers."

"I believe the opposition defined her actions as 'discriminatory.'"

"You should know"--he gave me a beautiful white smile and winked a green eye at me--"Ms. Opposition."

"Just because Duke isn't a lapdog doesn't mean she can ruin his existence." I said, looking around for the golden retriever that had been my mother's nemesis since the day Dad brought him home. "Where is Duke anyway?"

"Tucked away inside Dad's shop."

"Lucky boy. What did he do? Go potty on her Persian again?"

"No, he just can't endure both this squelching heat and Mom. A dog can only take so much in one afternoon." Odd but true: Duke had no idea he was actually a dog.

We moved along the sidewalk that passes in front of the courthouse, and a few people parted enough for me to make out the lovely vision I left less than an hour ago after a perfectly normal lunch at The Lady & Sons. Her blue capri slacks and floral Kate Spade mules came into view before her face did.

"Does she have a chain wrapped around her?"

Thomas laughed and folded his arms across his chest. "Yes, that would be a chain."

"What's that big stone thing that she's attached to?" I asked, not certain I wanted to know.

"That, my friend, is a six-thousand-pound stone monument of the Ten Commandments."

"You are not serious."

"Dead serious. Judge Hoddicks brought it in yesterday afternoon. Had it delivered right here."

"Who's he trying to be, Roy Moore?"

"Judge Moore called him earlier actually. Right before I left Judge Hoddicks's office." Thomas wiped the beading sweat off of his forehead and pushed it up through his short, sun-kissed brown hair. "Judge Hoddicks says the case belongs to the people, not the courts. So he wants to keep it in the limelight."

"Is there a reason he's not chained to it instead of Mother?" I watched Mother's beaming smile shine over all. She flitted her head from side to side as if she were ringmaster of this circus.

"Well, a suit was filed against the monument and Judge Hoddicks first thing this morning by some attorneys from Athens and by the ACLU. Judge countersued. Mother suggested the judge take care of the legal matters, and she would take care of the monument."

"You mean public relations."

"No, I mean the monument."

I looked down at my own pretty shoes, trying to avoid the eyes of the very woman who had purchased them. "And Jake said?"

"Haven't heard yet. You can ask him yourself." He pointed to Dad, who was standing on the right set of stairs that entered the courthouse. He was talking to Judge Hoddicks and smiling.

Dad caught Thomas's delighted smile and my mortified stare and winked. My gaze followed his secure gait as he walked over to my mother, whispered in her ear, gave her a kiss on the cheek, and brought his striking six-foot-one frame our way.

Dad patted me on my shoulder and was about to walk past me. "Where are you going?"

He stopped to smile at me. "Back to work."

"Back to work! You've got to be kidding me!" I chuckled. He matched my chuckle with his own.

"No. I'm not kidding."

"You mean you're going to leave her here, strapped to a piece of stone, to be aired on the nightly news? Our reputation will be left here on the sidewalk to be feasted on by water bugs!" I added extra effect to my statement by crushing the water bug that had bravely, yet stupidly, made its way to my area of the sidewalk.

He kissed me on my cheek then brushed his hands through his slightly graying brown hair. "Yes, that's exactly what I'm going to do."

I stared at the disappearing image of my father as he casually sauntered back to his world of coffee and calm, khakis and polo shirts. My father, at the age of fifty-four, had indisputably gone insane. "But . . . how . . . why?" I turned my face upward. "Why me, Lord?"

"Take it easy, Vanni. You've got a story and we've got drama," Thomas said, patting me on the back and heading over to our mother like an overgrown adolescent enjoying the spotlight.

"But I don't need drama." I called out, gesturing to no one in particular. "Really, I can create my own. Who needs extra?"

But then extra arrived. Amber Topaz Childers, the reigning Miss Savannah United States of America, came up from behind and goosed me. I screeched. She giggled. And her aqua-colored eyes, a combination of natural brown irises and artificially colored contact lenses, made taking her serious very difficult.

"Is this not the most exciting thing ever?" she squealed.

"Right up there with an enema," I muttered.

"Right up there with a what?" She crinkled her perfect nose.

"Right up there with an evening at the cinema."

"Oh my word. Are you telling me you, Savannah Phillips"--as if my name were lost on me--"have had more exciting times than this?"

"In abundance."

"All with your mother?"

"Right at the center of it."

"Are you the luckiest girl alive or what?"

"Or what." I looked at this beauty in her little pink pantsuit with matching lipstick and earrings. She could have been mistaken for a flamingo had her hair not been quite so . . . shall we say, lively. But even it was held back with a matching pink grosgrain ribbon.

And with nothing more to say, sh...


Product Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Thomas Nelson (August 9, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0849944562
  • ISBN-13: 978-0849944567
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.4 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #492,945 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Denise Hildreth Jones is a novelist and international speaker. She has spoken for the last thirteen years to women's ministries, churches, and for the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association. Denise began her career over seventeen years ago writing for other people. She eventually ventured into the world of fiction with her first novel, Savannah from Savannah, and has since published several books, including her latest novel, Hurricanes in Paradise. Her novels have been featured in Southern Living; hailed as "smart and witty" by Library Journal; and chosen for the Pulpwood Queen's and Women of Faith book clubs. And has just released her first non-fiction book Flying Solo: A Journey of Divorce, Healing and a Very Present God" the journals chronicling her painful divorce. She makes her home in Franklin, Tennessee with her husband, five "bonus" children and two dogs. And every now and then she has a Coca-Cola.

 

Customer Reviews

16 Reviews
5 star:
 (11)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:
 (2)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (16 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Avoid my Mom, avoid myself, July 9, 2006
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Savannah Comes Undone (Savanah Series) (Paperback)
In her second of the Savannah series, Denise Hildreth scores high marks once again. While the first book focused on Savannah's post college homecoming, job search and identity crisis, this book took us further along the path of a young woman who has gotten a new dream but is still struggling with putting the old dream to rest. Torn between laughter and tears the whole reading, Savannah hits home in her dealing with her mother's fanatical response to censorship by attempting pure avoidance tactics coupled with the desire to hang on to the comfortable past (even if it really is over and even if the present is SO much better).

Even though she is mortified by Victoria's behavior, deep down Savannah is really proud of her Mom. She and her Mom are enough alike and enough different that they clash. Savannah has strong opinions but expresses them very differently from Victoria, something which doesn't go unnoticed or unappreciated.

My Mom and I are like Savannah and Victoria...fiercely proud of one another while clashing not so slightly from time to time. WHile this read provided so many fun visuals and hillarious situations that I had to quit drinking my Coke because I kept staining the pages of my book with my laughter induced sprays, it went a step deeper and did some "tilling" in my heart.

The leaving of a lasting impact is the mark of really great writing. Everyone should read this book for a great glimpse into the female coming of age process (especially in the South) that hooks you with laughter and keeps you with depth.

Way to go, Denise!
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Boring, don't waste your time, August 5, 2006
This review is from: Savannah Comes Undone (Savanah Series) (Paperback)
I should have known something was amiss when the only positive reviews the publisher could drum up was an anonymous homemaker in Baton Rouge and a nameless graphic designer in California.

Don't bother reading this book if you didn't read the first installment because the author makes too many references to the events in the first book and often it was hard to figure out what she was going on about.

The author tries too hard to make the main character Savannah funny, the result is you get a lot of one-liners and not much character development. Because of the lack of character growth and development, I found it hard to empathise with or care about Savannah or any of the other characters in this book. The pace of the book is very slow, and there are many scenes where nothing happens. I skipped and skimmed over pages and was still able to follow what was going on in the story. Alot of the story seemed to be just filler material, that had nothing to do with the plot but was just a chance for the author to air her own political views-which I might add I could have done without.

If you are looking for an entertaining work of fiction you'd better look elsewhere.

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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Savannah from Savannah comes undone., August 30, 2005
This review is from: Savannah Comes Undone (Savanah Series) (Paperback)

Savannah's life takes an unsuspected twist. Her mother, Victoria, a former Miss Georgia United States of America, chains herself to a monument of the Ten Commandments in the town square, much to Savannah's chagrin.

Savannah from Savannah, Georgia, isn't impressed. Her life is full enough as she begins a new job, anticipates a move into her own apartment, and makes outrageous plans to regain the attention of her former boyfriend. Her mother's most recent drama is not a welcome intrusion into Savannah's life of chaos.

But try as she might, Savannah just can't ignore the towns main attraction - her mother. As news crews roll into town, Savannah is reminded daily about the events in the square by her father, her boss, her friends, and the mysterious Joy, a lady who appears daily wearing the same dress and speaking pearls of wisdom, all the while eyeing up Savannah's much treasured food.

With a newspaper deadline fast approaching, Savannah must come up with a human-interest story. Unfortunately, the only thing going on in town worthy of human interest is her mother's exploits. Savannah struggles to remain complacent about the events around her, unwilling to take a firm stand on either side. But she soon finds she must make a choice when her picture is unwittingly displayed on the front page of the paper and personal confessions are made public.

SAVANNAH COMES UNDONE is a charming novel told in a humorous Southern voice.

Unfortunately I haven't read Denise Hildreth's previous book, SAVANNAH FROM SAVANNAH, so throughout this novel I often felt that I was missing something. There are numerous references to past events in Savannah's life, so I would recommend you read the first book before indulging in SAVANNAH COMES UNDONE.
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