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Where Lilacs Still Bloom: A Novel [Paperback]

Jane Kirkpatrick
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (133 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 17, 2012
One woman, an impossible dream, and the faith it took to see it through. 
 
German immigrant and farm wife Hulda Klager possesses only an eighth-grade education—and a burning desire to create something beautiful. What begins as a hobby to create an easy-peeling apple for her pies becomes Hulda’s driving purpose: a time-consuming interest in plant hybridization that puts her at odds with family and community, as she challenges the early twentieth-century expectations for a simple housewife. 
 
Through the years, seasonal floods continually threaten to erase her Woodland, Washington garden and a series of family tragedies cause even Hulda to question her focus. In a time of practicality, can one person’s simple gifts of beauty make a difference? 
 
Based on the life of Hulda Klager, Where Lilacs Still Bloom is a story of triumph over an impossible dream and the power of a generous heart.
 
“Beauty matters… it does. God gave us flowers for a reason. Flowers remind us to put away fear, to stop our rushing and running and worrying about this and that, and for a moment, have a piece of paradise right here on earth.”

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

After 26 years living on Starvation Lane on a remote ranch in Oregon, Jane Kirkpatrick and her husband, Jerry, moved back to Bend, Oregon where they'd lived years before.  Two dogs and a formerly outdoor cat made the transition well as they begin a new life next to a lily pond instead of the John Day River. Where Lilacs Still Bloom is Jane's twenty-second book, her nineteenth novel. She has two lilacs from Hulda Klager’s garden.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Prologue
1948

It’s the lilacs I’m worried over. My Favorite and Delia and City of Kalama, and so many more; my as yet unnamed
double creamy-white with its many petals is especially vulnerable.

I can’t find the seeds I set aside for it, lost in the rush to move out of the rivers’ way, get above Woodland’s lowlands
now underwater. So much water from the double deluge of he Columbia and the Lewis. Oh, how those rivers can rise in
the night, breaching dikes we mere mortals put up hoping to stem the rush of what is as natural as air: water seeping, rising, pushing, reshaping all within its path.

I watch as all the shaping of my eighty-five years washes away.

My only surviving daughter puts her arm around my shoulder, pulls me to her. Her house is down there too, water
rising in her basement. We can’t see it from this bluff.

“It’ll be all right, Grandma. We’re all safe. You can decide later what to do about your flowers,” my grandson Roland
tells me.

“I know it. All we can do now is watch the rivers and pray no one dies.”

How I wish Frank stood beside me. We’d stake each other up as we did through the years. I could begin again with him at my side. But now uncertainty curls against my old spine, and I wonder if my lilacs have bloomed their last
time.

One
Food for Thought
Hulda, 1889

Daffodils as yellow as the sun, ruby tulips, and a row of purple lilacs from the old country border the house I live
in with my husband, Frank, our three young children (ages eight, five, and three), and next month, if all goes well, our
fourth child. We are hoping for a boy. My parents live with us, but only for a few more months. They’ve built a new house near Woodland, Washington. We’ll be moving too, to a farm of our own south of Whelan Road. We’ll still be within a few miles of each other, a close-knit family of German Americans captured by this lush landscape between the Lewis and Columbia Rivers. We call where we live the Bottoms. It’s made up of black soil that was once the bottom of those great rivers—and sometimes becomes so again with the floods. We hope our new places will be less prone to flooding, though it’s the nature of rivers to rise with the spring thaws. We live with it.

My mother and children have dug daffodil and dahlia bulbs, snipped lilac starts to plant, and my sisters and brother
and neighbors will give us sprouts from their bushes once we move, which is the custom. A lilac says “Here is a place to stay,” and how perfect that such promise of permanence should come from family and friends?

We can’t move the apple orchard. But I wielded my grafting knife and wrapped the shoots, scions they’re called, in
sawdust and stored them in the barn earlier this year when the trees were dormant. Today I’ll graft them onto saplings at my parents’ new house, so one day there’ll be an apple orchard there. I’ve also stepped into the uncommon for a simple house Frau: I’ve grafted a Wild Bismarck apple variety known for its crispness with a Wolf River, an apple of a larger size.

My father encouraged such dappling with nature—and that I keep my efforts quiet, at least for a time.

It was April, and we tied the scions onto the saplings he’d started as soon as he knew they’d be building the house. I
liked working with my father in the orchard, a misty rain giving way to sunbreaks, and the aroma of cedar and pine
drifting down from the surrounding hills in the shadow of Mount St. Helens. So much seems possible in such vibrant
landscapes. A garden is the edge of possibility.

He was a great storyteller and advice giver, my father, though this day his story surprised. “Don’t tell Frank right away,” he told me. “Let him think you’re just grafting plain old apples to help us extend the orchard.”

“Frank wouldn’t mind.”

“In time—when you have the final result in hand. But Frank discourages you. I see it, Hulda.” I pushed at my frizzy
walnut-brown hair and stared at him. “He dismisses your interests if they go beyond your children and him.”

“It’s a woman’s duty to meet her family’s needs.”

“Meet their needs first. But you want a crisper, bigger apple too,” he said. “Nothing wrong with that.”

“I do. I get so annoyed at those mealy things that hang on to their peels like bark to a tree.”

He nodded. “Some would say that meddling with nature isn’t wise. Frank might agree—especially if the one meddling
is a mother who should be content with looking after her family.”

I stood, using my hoe to help me and my burgeoning belly up. I was nearly as tall as my father. He liked Frank; at
least I always thought he did. My love and admiration for both men were rooted deep. It felt strange to defend my husband to my father. “You’re wrong, Papa.” I pushed my pointy straw hat back. “Frank’s a good helpmate for me. And he’ll like having more pies.”

My father tied another scion onto a branch, making sure the cambium was fully covered in the slanted cut I’d made so
the two would bond securely. “You have a gift, Hulda. You can see distinctive things in plants. You see the possibility,
like a crisper, larger apple and then imagine it into being.” He lifted another scion as emphasis. “Those are gifts few have, and people can be envious.”

My father had never granted me such a compliment, and I was both pleased that he noticed and humbled that he
shared it. “Not Frank,” I insisted.

“Not everyone understands that we are all created to have complicated challenges and dreams. We must honor our longings, then go beyond them whether others support us or not.”

I wondered if he spoke of my mother. Did she resent my father’s dreams that took us from Germany to Wisconsin,
Minnesota, San Francisco, then back to Wisconsin, and then here to the Lewis River of the new state of Washington? My father had many longings: farming, becoming a brewmaster, investing in creameries and cheese factories before the landscape was dotted with cows. He’d done all those. Now logging interested him, and he’d built a big two-story house; yet another adventure that meant more change for my mother—and the rest of us too.

“My dream is to raise my family.” I didn’t see getting a crisper apple as any budding desire. I wasn’t rising beyond my
station. “These apples will make life better for them.” I was merely an immigrant housewife wanting to save time peeling apples.

“Just think of what I’ve said.” He wrapped his big paw around my hand that was holding a scion. He looked me in
the eye. I swallowed. “Huldie, don’t deny the dreams. They’re a gift given to make your life full. Accept them. Reach for them. We are not here just to endure hard times until we die. We are here to live, to serve, to trust, and to create out of our longings.”

“Yes, Papa,” I said, but it wasn’t until after he was gone, years later, that I came to understand what I’d committed to.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 384 pages
  • Publisher: WaterBrook Press (April 17, 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1400074304
  • ISBN-13: 978-1400074303
  • Product Dimensions: 5.6 x 1 x 8.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (133 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #314,170 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

If you'd like more information about me, please come visit my website at www.jkbooks.com and click on my blog. My dog also has a blog and you can find out what it's like to be Bodacious Bo, too. A monthly newsletter called Story Sparks is my way of sharing books about authors I enjoy as well as commenting on life and love. You'll find out more about me than you probably ever wanted to know!

One item not listed on my lists of books is my selection included in an anthology called "Crazy Woman Creek: Women Rewrite the American West" published by Houghton Mifflin I also have a piece in Storytellers II, a book published a few years ago by Multnomah Press and a few short selections in Daily Guideposts of a few years back. My first novella, "The Courting Quilt" is part of a collection that made the New York Times bestsellers September 2011 in a collection called Log Cabin Christmas. The rest of my writing, as they say, is history. Or it was until my first contemporary came out this fall. Called Barcelona Calling, it's the story of a writer who loses her way as she seeks fulfillment thinking she'll find it with fame. It's a laugh out loud book according to reviewers. I hope you'll enjoy it.

Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
16 of 17 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A GARDENER'S EPIC ROMANCE STORY -IN BLOOM 1889-1958 February 26, 2012
Format:Paperback|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
If you've ever cupped a lilac cluster in your palms and sniffed deeply; then you know the pleasure you'll find reading WHERE LILACS STILL BLOOM. Jane Kirkpatrick has written pure sunshine for gardeners.

It takes place in the shadow of Mt. St. Helens, between rivers that are a constant flood threat. A true lady of limited education becomes a hybridizer like the iris lady from the town I live in, the same time period. Washington State's Hulda (based on the real woman) painstakingly does the work of planting, keeping records, rooting cuttings, tagging, and moving pollen, like a human doing bee's work. She moves pollen to the spots where God could take a lilac to amazing changes. And yes you'll catch a bit of the lady's faith at work, but never a sermon, just a wonderful story of perseverance, gumption, and determination against odds.
Her dream was to produce a cream colored lilac bloom with 12 petals. Even if it took her life. Author Jane's writing accepts you into Hulda's home.

A favorite quote became 2: "Grief is the price we have to pay for loving" and another longer one that stated gardening to be a democratic task, never one plant better than the next, all with their place in God's plan, and each allowing the others their moment to shine--no jealousy--egalitarian.

The amazing life story of Hulda is followed by added info via Author's Notes, a Readers Guide (questions for group or individual), and traditional Acknowledgments. A front of the book bonus was a CAST of CHARACTERS, a practice used long ago, and I'm glad to see returning.
WELL DONE, fun, compelling, and lilacly aromatic.

Kirkpatrick is a proven author and I also enjoyed a period quilt story of hers in "com/A-Log-Cabin-Christmas-Collection/dp/1616264780">A Log Cabin Christmas Collection" worth reading any season.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
Hulda Klager, German immigrant, wants simple things from life: her family and to work with her flowers. This story is based on her life as she lovingly cares for her family during crises and triumph and on her work in hybridizing lilacs. This task of love is the joy of her life, in order to add beauty and comfort to life through colors and fragrances.

Gently and lovingly written, this book is filled with the fragrance and color of the beautiful and simple joys of a life well lived. Comforting in its word, it is an inspiration in Hulda's strength, love, and courage.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Surprisingly Enjoyable May 24, 2012
By Megan
Format:Paperback
When I started to read Where Lilacs Still Bloom, I was unsure how much I was going to enjoy it. I usually don't like books that start with an event that will occur very late in the story, but I was pleasantly surprised by how much I actually enjoyed this book.

Hulda's passion for plants is not something I share, but it was so well described that I would love to start a very small garden. Hulda had a lot of ideas for plant hybridization, I found myself hoping she would accomplish what she kept hoping to with her plants. And I have to say that what she wound up achieving was astounding!

If Hulda's real family was as supportive of her as portrayed in this book, she was very blessed to have them. Her husband especially, was written in such a way that you can't help but love him - in many ways he reminds me of my grandfather. It was sad how long it took Hulda to trust her husband with her passion for plant hybridization, but I think a big reason for it was because her father had discouraged her from trusting him with it. He didn't think her husband would understand, let alone support her with it - how wrong he was!

Hulda had many trying times and heartaches in this novel, which I could always see coming as it was very obvious when something bad was going to happen. I am not sure if this was intentional or not, but I prefer to be surprised with both the good and the bad. Anticipating the bad things lessened the sad feelings I might have had, had it been more of a surprise.

Where the Lilacs Still Bloom covers a span of nearly 70 years, so needless to say there wasn't a lot of time spent with some of the supporting characters for me to feel a connection with them.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Not my most favorite book June 22, 2012
Format:Paperback
Wow, this book was not a fun one to read. I read a lot of Christian fiction but did not find this book enjoyable. This is a story based on the life of Hulda Klager. She is a German Immigrant. The story started off very interesting. It was talking about her love to hybridize plants and make them more to her liking. Her first goal was to make an apple that was crisp, but easy to peel. It took years but she achieved it. The thing that really turned me off from this book was that she never stops talking about the flowers. No matter what is going on in the story. People may have died. She might have gone through a flood. She may have a daughter who lost a loved one. It did not matter her whole life was revolved around her flowers. Mostly her lilacs. It got to the point that I was rolling my eyes, thinking seriously.

There are may sad things that happens to this woman. I realize that this was based off of someones life, but I did not find it enjoyable. I can not believe someone would really wrap there entire lives around propagating flowers.

I also did not enjoy the jumping around in the story. It made no sense how the characters were going to come together. Yes they do come together but by that time you really don't remember all the details.

I literally had to force myself to sit down and read this book. I really would not recommend it to anyone. Unless you are really into flowers, specifically lilacs and propagating. Other than that it was not an enjoyable read.

I give this book 1 star. This book was given to me as a gift from Waterblook Multnomah Publications. I have not been paid to give this review.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Where Lilacs bloom
This was an interesting book about how Hulda Klager created beautiful Lilacs. A group of us went to see them this April.
Published 1 month ago by Maryann Lundy
5.0 out of 5 stars A charming 1800s romance, based upon a true story
What a sweet story. Hulda Klager's life is the basis for this novel. A German immigrant to the United States, Hulda was a farmer's wife with an 8th grade education. Read more
Published 1 month ago by N. Ferguson
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Story
Well written the kindof book you cannot put down., kept your interest page after page
and found myself reading every chance I could.
Published 1 month ago by lou stack
3.0 out of 5 stars Good story, yet...
Lilacs hold a special place in my heart, so I was delighted to receive this book,
Where Lilacs Still Bloom, by Jane Kirkpatrick. Read more
Published 1 month ago by D. Vance
4.0 out of 5 stars A real American story
I live 10 miles from this place and have visited many times. My dad grew up there and actually helped with the clean out after a huge flood.
Published 2 months ago by Nancy Kelly
4.0 out of 5 stars Faith blooms in a lilac garden in Jane Kirkpatrick's `Where Lilacs...
Award-winning author Jane Kirkpatrick takes readers for the journey of a lifetime - the lifetime of Hulda Klager, wife, mother, gardener and amateur botanist - in her fictionalized... Read more
Published 2 months ago by Mary Beth Magee
5.0 out of 5 stars A different Jane Kirkpatrick
Excellent book! Especially interesting since we live not far away :) I've read others by the same author and lliked them all.
Published 3 months ago by John Koppen
5.0 out of 5 stars The best of the best
As far as I know I have read all of Jane Kirkpatricks books - or very close to it. There is not one that I wasn't sad to see the last page on. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Sheri Schneider
5.0 out of 5 stars This was wonderful!
I couldn't put this book down, it was very engaging and I felt like they were part of my family.
Published 4 months ago by Diana Mortimore
5.0 out of 5 stars great story
This is a historical story about a lady who planted a garden in our beautiful state that still exists. Read more
Published 4 months ago by M. Fairbanks
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