Share for friends:

Blessed Are The Cheesemakers (2004)

Blessed Are the Cheesemakers (2004)

Book Info

Rating
3.81 of 5 Votes: 5
Your rating
ISBN
0446693014 (ISBN13: 9780446693011)
Language
English
Publisher
grand central publishing

About book Blessed Are The Cheesemakers (2004)

This was fine, I guess? I liked aspects of it, and I definitely want to vacation at the farm, but there were also some issues with it. The tone is a little uneven--the author appears to be going for a kind of Sarah Addison Allen, magical romance kind of vibe, but there is a ton of profanity (usually delightfully delivered in an Irish accent) and there are a few pretty graphic scenes where two characters almost (but don't quite) have sex. Of course, when they finally do consummate their passion, it happens off the page, which is a little weird. I'm not bothered by cussing or sex in my fiction, but they came across as a bit jarring when juxtaposed with other elements of the book. There is also a spectacularly ill-conceived "reveal" near the end that requires a suspension of disbelief so Herculean that it undercuts a lot of the rest of the book. I mean. The goal of romantic fiction, as I understand it, is to have readers rooting for your characters to get together, not for them to be screaming at one character to run the other way because the other character is VERY CLEARLY mentally unstable. So there's that.I didn't hate it, but I can't really recommend it either. If you do plan to forge ahead anyway, I suggest bypassing the audiobook. The woman who narrated it has a delightful natural accent, but her attempts at Australian and American accents are better left unheard. I picked this one up off the library shelf when I needed an audiobook to pass the driving time, which it technically did. One of these days, however, I will learn to request audiobooks in advance so that I don't have to rely on the questionable selection at our small local branch.

To give full context, I'm in the middle of a move, tied up with family concerns, and otherwise surviving the end of a particularly nasty winter. I kept this book out of the packed file because I planned to read it and leave it behind. Within the first few pages, I realized that there was no way I could do that. I have to keep this sweet, loveable book nearby. The magical cheese farm of the Josephs Corrigan and Feehan, with its gaggle of singing pregnant milkmaids and cows that milk best to the Sound of Music, the tales of how to make wonderful cheese, and the many many threads of lives that have been tangled together made me smile, weep, and laugh out loud. I fell in love at the first description of the Princess Grace cheese, languishing in a fridge somewhere and gradually getting more annoyed (and smelly); I smiled with recognition at the earnest husband doing "good works" in a perfectly fine island community for the sole purpose of self-aggrandizement; I loved the townspeople and their antics and stories; I cheered as each character came into their own.It's not a complex story, but it is laced with wisdom, running like a fine line of blue through a cheese. Parts of it have the slightly cheeky smell of a good Stilton. Parts of it glide down the throat like a creamy Brie. All of it fills the heart.Key thing is, I ended it with a smile on my face, a tear in my eye, a hunger for some really good cheese, and a strong desire to go to Ireland. Or in some way, to head towards where I feel is home.Loved it.And I've got to say the title is one of the best I've seen.

Do You like book Blessed Are The Cheesemakers (2004)?

Throughout the book I kept thinking... I don't really care for this book. I felt like it just didn't mesh well. It seemed like Lynch was reaching from all different corners of her creative mind to come up with these circumstances for her characters. HOWEVER, with that said... she brought it all together in the end nicely. I am not sure if I care for her writing style. I feel like there were so many good pieces of her story and such a good basic underlying idea for the plot and just wasn't executed for all it could have been. One example is her use of $10 words intermittently. I appreciate larger words and don't even mind looking them up when I am not certain of their meanings, BUT seemed as if she were trying to hard to sound "smart." (Not that she isn't smart, she has published books) I was slightly reminded of Steinbeck's novella, Of Mice and Men. The two characters from Steinbeck: George and Lennie had some quirky and witty personalities and with bantering throughout (as I briefly recall in my memory from high school over 10 years ago now). The characters in this book Corrie and Fee reminded me of the Steinbeck characters. They were by far my favorite characters in the book. I like the concept of the cheese and dairy farm and the overall story as a whole was clever and unique.
—Renee

Set in County Cork Ireland in Coolarney House, where some of the world's foremost farmhouse cheese is produced. It has been owned and operated for generations by two families, the Corrigans, who supply the cows for the milk and the Feehans, who supply the cheesemaking ability. The last two denizens of these families, both named Joseph, are getting up there in years and need someone, preferably family to take over the operations of the farmhouse. Their cheeses are known throughout the world, a fact that they chalk up to their consummate cheesemaking ability and good pastures for the cows. They also use a special "breed" of milkmaid. They only hire young women…who all happen to be pregnant…and vegetarians…and, are able to sing songs from "The Sound of Music" for hours on end. The cheesemakers, known as Corrie and Fee, have to find someone to take over the business and pin their hopes on Corrie's granddaughter, Abbey. Kit Stephens, a recently widowed New York investment banker. Despondent over his wife's death, Kit drowns his sorrows in barrels of Grey Goose vodka and is summarily fired from his tony Wall Street firm. Luckily, Kit's plucky Irish secretary knows just the place for him to dry out, a certain farm where they make a certain type of cheese.Easy read, cried at some parts, enjoyed it.Language and Sexual reference
—Melanie

(3.5 stars) Three stories come together in an Irish dairy farm. Corrie and Fee are the elderly cheesemakers, who are desperate to find the next generation before it is too late. Their operation is a labor of love, with many quirks, including pregnant, vegetarian milkmaids who milk to the Sound of Music. Abbey is the granddaughter who was taken away from the farm by her mother, and after marrying at a young age, she lives on a Pacific Island with her husband who is obsessed with irrigation. When she finds out that he has been "irrigating" other pastures after he found out she cannot have children, she is horrified and leaves with a friend to return to the U.K. and find her family. The third part involves Kit, a stockbroker whose life has devolved after the death of his wife and unborn baby. His assistant sends him off to Ireland to dry out and get sober. Kit unwittingly is drawn into the contest for the cheesemaker position and meets Abbey. They must find out if they have the touch to make a cheese worthy of Corrie and Fee. The cheese has a life and power of its own in the story and lends a charming taste of magical realism to the tale. The story has lots of humor including a pregnant cat called Jesus and other delightful quirks.
—Michelle

download or read online

Read Online

Write Review

(Review will shown on site after approval)

Other books by author Sarah-Kate Lynch

Other books in category Middle Grade & Children's