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The Unlikely Lavender Queen: A Memoir of Unexpected Blossoming
 
 
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The Unlikely Lavender Queen: A Memoir of Unexpected Blossoming [Hardcover]

Jeannie Ralston (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (73 customer reviews)


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Book Description

May 27, 2008
“I couldn’t help but question how I’d gotten to this strange spot in my life, so far from what I’d expected for myself. Yes, there had been a heady romance a few years back. Then a slew of subsequent decisions, fueled by love and yearnings I didn’t even know I had. But I never, ever would have suspected that this was where the sum total of them would bring me. That afternoon a new doubt dripped into my mind. When do you know, I wondered, whether the choices you’ve made were the right ones?”

In 1990, Jeannie Ralston was a successful magazine writer and bona fide city girl—the type of woman who couldn't imagine living on soil not shaded by skyscrapers. By 1994, she had called off an engagement, married Robb, a National Geographic photographer, and was living in Blanco Texas, population 1600.

The Unlikely Lavender Queen is the intimate story of a woman who gives up a lot for the man she loves – her beloved blue state, bagels and all-night bodegas—only to have to wonder: Was it too much? Ralston offers a lively chronicle of her life as a wife, new mother and an urban settler in rural Texas. As she labors to convert a dilapidated barn into a livable home, deal with scorpions and unbearably hot summers, raise two young children while Robb is frequently away on assignment, she realizes her ultimate struggle is to reconcile her life plans and goals with her husband’s without coming out the proverbial loser. And just when it seems like she might be losing that fight--and herself-- a little purple bloom changes her life.

For centuries lavender has been a mystical herb, so valuable to ancient Romans that a bushel would cost nearly a month’s wages. But when Robb returns from a trip to Provence with a plan for growing lavender on their land, Ralston is not convinced—in fact the last thing she needed or wanted was to take up farming on top of everything else. Then, much to her surprise, she slowly but surely falls in love with lavender, and in the course of growing and selling blooms, hosting the public at the farm, and creating lavender products, she discovers a new side of herself. A few short years later, Ralston had built Hill Country Lavender, a thriving commercial enterprise that transforms both her little corner of Texas and her life.

The Unlikely Lavender Queen will resonate with all women who have faced the tough choices that come with “having it all” and secretly (or not so secretly) hoped for great adventure to come along and surprise them. Ralston’s honest, funny, and poignant memoir is a testament to the fact that such adventures await us around every bend in life.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Arriving in Manhattan for a McCall's magazine summer internship when she was 21, Ralston was smitten with big-city life. Soon she had the career of her dreams, a Chelsea apartment, even a film student fiancé. Then, on a feature assignment for Life, she met Robb, a photographer for National Geographic, and her life was up-ended. Before long, Ralston was leaving her boyfriend and New York City, to move with Robb to his home state of Texas. They settled first in Austin, but Robb wanted a less urban lifestyle, so they bought land with a creek and an old stone barn in the Texas Hill Country. Robb's busy schedule of international photo shoots left Ralston in charge of house renovations, hardly her forte. Then Robb had his next idea—they'd raise lavender on their limestone-rich land, which was similar to the soil of Provence. Ralston agreed, provided they start having children. Together, they began a successful niche-industry, growing and processing lavender into a variety of marketable products. In this satisfying and enjoyable story, the reluctant Ralston eventually falls in love with their fields of lavender. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

"Book clubs, start your engines! Jeannie Ralston's engaging read takes on all the current issues on a woman's plate -- career, marriage, kids, health, money, sanity and social conscience. It's good and it's good for you."
--Marianne Wiggins, author of The Shadow Catcher and Evidence of Things Unseen


“A smart, ambitious -and secretly ‘hayseed’- Tennessee girl comes to Manhattan and earns her props as a magazine writer. Then she falls in love with a Lone Star State-loyal globe-trotting photographer and agrees to chuck her hard-won sophistication to become a Texan, a ranch wife and mother, and finally, an herb farmer. Jeannie Ralston's deliciously intimate exploration of autonomy vs. partnership, worldliness vs. domesticity, and order vs. chaos is filled with epiphanies scented in lavender. Worried about finding your strength in a marriage to a (benignly) dominating man? Read this, enjoy, and have heart."
-Sheila Weller, author of Girls Like Us: Carole King, Joni Mitchell, Carly Simon-and the Journey of a Generation and Dancing at Ciro's: A Family's Love, Loss and Scandal on the Sunset Strip

"From New York City to rural Texas, Jeannie Ralston's The Unlikely Lavender Queen entrances. Here is a smart, funny, and edgy voice, well worth following into the lavender fields!"
-Catherine Goldhammer, author of Still Life with Chickens

"Honestly, I was about as enthusiastic about reading a book about a lavender farm as the author once was about starting one, but Jeannie Ralston's sharp writing and old-school storytelling quickly drew me in. Her memoir is unusual and refreshing -instead of harrowing the reader with tales of tragedy and dysfunction, Ralston inspires with behind-the-scenes stories of a remarkable project and a life well lived."
-Marion Winik, author of Above Us Only Sky and The Lunch-Box Chronicles

"Jeannie Ralston magically takes us along on her nutty, agonizing, hilarious and uplifting journey to discover happiness and meaning in her own backyard. Learning to want what you already have is the greatest lesson in life and this wonderful story shows you how to let it happen."
- Martha Sherrill, author of Dog Man: An Uncommon Life on a Faraway Mountain

"Jeannie Ralston's memoir is a lovely read, and inspires us to know that you can find beauty-fields of it!- in the most difficult and unexpected places."

-Laura Fraser, author of The Italian Affair

"
Brimming with piquant observations on everything from marriage to motherhood, careers to cappuccino, Ralston's exuberant memoir showcases the resiliency of the human spirit."
--Booklist


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Broadway; First Edition edition (May 27, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0767927958
  • ISBN-13: 978-0767927956
  • Product Dimensions: 6.4 x 1 x 10.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (73 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #733,805 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

73 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (73 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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28 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Starring Role in Life's Adventure, May 27, 2008
This review is from: The Unlikely Lavender Queen: A Memoir of Unexpected Blossoming (Hardcover)
Have you ever noticed how the one thing that most attracts you to a person can end up being the thing that, in time, makes you absolutely crazy?

Jeannie Ralston's friend Kim once told her "You're just not very adventurous." But any girl who was willing to move from Tennessee to New York, after landing an internship with McCall's magazine, must have had some longing for excitement lurking inside. From there, she carefully engineered a flourishing career as a freelance writer and, thanks to fashion editor Kim, a well-dressed one at that. When she was assigned to work with Robb Kendrick, a cute young photographer from National Geographic magazine, Jeannie got swept right off her Manolo Blahniks and into a life beyond her imagining.

It began as a whirlwind of travel and excitement, where she might wake up on her thirtieth birthday and find her bikini-clad self on the cover of Travel + Leisure magazine. So how did she end up at age forty, living on a farm outside of Blanco, Texas, with work-roughened hands, aching back, and a husband who's rarely home? Ah, therein lies the story!

When Robb first announced that he despised living in New York and wanted to move back to Texas, Jeannie felt sure he would come around eventually. However, she had no idea just how persistent and persuasive her new husband could be. Next thing she knew, they owned a house in Austin.

Of course, that was just the beginning. Robb is an idea man, a man who needs to challenge himself with new projects. A man with itchy feet, enamored with the idea of being a pioneer. After Austin, he hit upon the notion of transforming an old stone barn near Blanco into their home. Jeannie couldn't imagine moving to the country, but eventually caved in, on the condition that Robb must agree to their starting a family. Next, he was inspired by the lavender fields in Provence, and thought, why not in the Texas Hill Country? Though he didn't ask Jeannie to take over their lavender farm while he was away on assignment, both seemed to assume that she would. "This was the natural dance of our relationship. When he was off traveling, which totaled about eight months out of the year, though not all at once, I would get the ball, whatever the ball happened to be at the time."

I connected with this book on so many levels. First, it was just a great read. There was never a moment when I felt my interest flagging, and each chapter left me wanting more. Second, the Texas Hill Country is a delightful setting, uniquely beautiful and peopled by such interesting characters that it could easily hold its own against Tuscany or Provence. When I tried to picture a young woman whose previous life was straight out of "Sex and the City" dining at the Blanco Bowling Club Cafe or paying a social call on the crone next door who was busily carving up a deer and plopping the raw steaks down on the table right in front of our New York immigrant, I laughed so much that I almost needed a change of underwear.

On a much deeper level, though, The Unlikely Lavender Queen spoke to me of the struggles that all women today face: managing two big careers in a single relationship, becoming the caboose that follows a husband's engine, facing the ticking fertility clock--all the tradeoffs we make and what they cost us. It's not easy to bloom where we're planted.

At first Jeannie found herself wondering how much further from her true self she could go. Robb's attitude was looser: "You've just got to be open to surprises. Most people are scared of them. They'd rather be safe and comfortable than surprised." In time, thanks to his pushing and prodding, she found the courage to be a pioneer, discovered untapped talents that amazed them both, and together they launched a Texas industry. After a disastrous season when they were forced to deal with drought, floods, and grasshoppers of near-biblical proportions, a friend of Jeannie's said perhaps she had ended up in agriculture to learn the Zen of farming: the need for patience and letting go.

Once they ran out of projects and renovations at the lavender farm, though, Robb began to get restless and both he and Jeannie grew tired of having people descend on them each weekend. They sold part of the land, planted new lavender fields on property closer to town, and began to build another house. But when they decided to take the family to Mexico for Spanish lessons, their plans turned upside down. They now reside in San Miguel de Allende, though Jeannie still consults with and conducts seminars for Texas lavender growers.

I think perhaps Jeannie ended up with Robb because each needed the other for balance. Had she stayed in New York, she would have forever been the journalist, looking on and chronicling other's adventures. Now she is the star of her own story.

by Becky Lane
for Story Circle Book Reviews
reviewing books by, for, and about women
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12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Truth about the Texas Hill Country, July 24, 2008
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This review is from: The Unlikely Lavender Queen: A Memoir of Unexpected Blossoming (Hardcover)
I loved this book!!! Having lived in the Texas Hill Country for eight years, I fully understand many of the challenges faced by the author. This is a beautiful area of Texas enjoyed by many people who are on vacation. But attempting to grow a garden here is not an easy task. The rocky alkaline soil, erratic weather conditions, lack of rain, insects, armadillos, and deer make gardening a difficult proposition. Whiny? No, just stating facts. Hats off to Jeannie Ralston for not sugar-coating the story, and for her sense of humor in the face of adversity. All that said, there's no place I would rather live. She understands that sentiment as well by portraying the numerous benefits of rural life. Thanks to Jeannie for a wonderful book.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars UNlikely Lavendar Queen, August 18, 2008
This review is from: The Unlikely Lavender Queen: A Memoir of Unexpected Blossoming (Hardcover)
My friend recently lent it to me on vacation, but I could not finish in time. As soon as I got home, I ordered it and have spread the word on this unlikely life experience ever since. It is well written and described in complete detail. I now tell everyone to read it and I know they will enjoy it too. I look forward to reading about Ms. Ralston's future adventures. I know she will have some wonderful ones!
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