"Beth Webb Hart shares her knowledge of the lowcountry] with skill,
wisdom, and beauty."
- Pat Conroy, author of "The Prince of Tides"
When a business venture goes sour, Charleston blue-bloods Billy
and Dee DeLoach uproot their family and move into the caretaker's
cottage on what was once the family plantation estate on Edisto
Island. While the rest of her family falls to pieces, DeVeaux
struggles to sustain them through her reluctant help and her
stubborn hope.
Before the bankruptcy, the family had a graceful home in a
historic Charleston neighborhood. Country clubs, cotillions,
childhood friends, and a close-knit church group. Now they're
living in a run-down cottage on an island estate that is no longer
in the family. DeVeaux has a restaurant job, a cantankerous old
truck, and mud on just about everything.
But something is wearing DeVeaux down. It's not living on the
island, which is actually kind of interesting. And it's not missing
her old friends, who have developed an annoying fixation on boys.
What really bothers DeVeaux is that being "ruined" has changed her
dad into an ill-tempered jerk, and her mother just tiptoes around
him. If the good Lord has a plan for saving them, now might be a
good time to start.
A gritty but gentle drawl of a story, Grace at Low Tide is a
tender and evocative portrait of a young girl embracing womanhood.
With southern society as her backdrop, Beth Webb Hart paints for us
a hard-luck family scrabbling to find its heart again. It is a
testimony to the small miracles of love and loyalty--the gifts of
grace that manage to keep us all afloat, even at our lowest
ebb.
"a lovely, gifted writer."
"-Publishers Weekly"
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