Blackberry Wine: A Novel

Blackberry Wine: A Novel
by Joanne Harris

Blackberry Wine: A Novel
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Book Summary Information

Author: Joanne Harris
Edition: Paperback
Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published)
Published: 2001-04-24
ISBN: 0380815923
Number of pages: 368
Publisher: William Morrow Paperbacks

Book Reviews of Blackberry Wine: A Novel

Book Review: Swampwater
Summary: 2 Stars

I haven't read Chocolat, but I've seen the movie. It was good. Because of this, I naively assumed that the book must be even better, but after reading Harris' follow-up novel, Blackberry Wine, I know now that it must be a case of the movie surpassing the novel.

This book is terrible. Start to finish. I did not enjoy reading it, and I only finished it out of some absurd loyalty. To be perfectly honest, I am amazed that Harris wasn't embarrassed to put her picture on the bookjacket. It made me cringe, the open innocence to such a piece of shoddy crap. By the way, I'm relieved that Harris has overcome her dilemma and decided to live in London, despite being half-French. Misplaced modifier, or simply irrelevant...? Can't decide.

Her bloody main character, brilliant but apathetic writer (oh, marks for originality) Jay MacKintosh is so one-dimensional that I quickly stopped caring why he did things. His only consistency is his anger which, curiously enough, never fails to be misdirected. Harris takes up the omniprescent narrative with other characters infrequently, and always when it seems awkward, unnecessary, and unexpected. Just as she does with Jay, Harris is always careful to bore the reader during these annoying passages by telling them exactly what the character feels, instead of showing them. Basic rule of writing, hello? Basic education. Yes, admittedly we are inside the character's head, but, for Someone's sake, write it creatively or trash it altogether.

Anyway, there's not much to the story. Harris herself can't seem to decide what genre she's writing in, and I strongly suspect that she had Jay Mackintosh emulate her stream of consciousness writing style without the afterthough of editing, only he seems to be more successful at it than his careless creator. Unless the British spell "notice" as "notoice", I believe there is a typo as well. Is the book about a crazy man in a fugue, the bond between a boy and his mentor, carried into adulthood? Is it about the spirituality of gardening? A romance between two neighbors? A murder mystery/stalker tale? Sure, a GOOD writer could weave this all together to make a rich, engaging, plausible story, but Harris' talents seem to run awfully thin under such demands.

Despite being bitterly, bitterly disappointed, I am giving this more than one star. There are moments, perhaps even less, when Harris' potential winks through the manure. Some turns of phrase took me by surprise, and perhaps that's why I kept plugging forward. The image of Jay's girlfriend, Kerry, when they say goodbye, is so lightly touching (although she only sees fame-by-acquaintence slipping away) that I was surprised when she disappeared until the end of the novel, to emerge as her slap-worthy, opportunistic bitchself. These are sporadic and inconsistent glimmers of talent. Like pyrite, false gold.

Summary of Blackberry Wine: A Novel

As a boy, writer Jay Mackintosh spent three golden summers in the ramshackle home of "Jackapple Joe" Cox. A lonely child, he found solace in Old Joe's simple wisdom and folk charms. The magic was lost, however, when Joe disappeared without warning one fall.

Years later, Jay's life is stalled with regret and ennui. His bestselling novel, Jackapple Joe, was published ten years earlier and he has written nothing since. Impulsively, he decides to leave his urban life in London and, sight unseen, purchases a farmhouse in the remote French village of Lansquenet. There, in that strange and yet strangely familiar place, Jay hopes to re-create the magic of those golden childhood summers. And while the spirit of Joe is calling to him, it is actually a similarly haunted, reclusive woman who will ultimately help Jay find himself again.


Joanne Harris's first novel, Chocolat, was set in the sleepy French village of Lansquenet, where enchantment, romance, and soft-centered truths issued from the local confectioner's shop. She returns to the same location for Blackberry Wine. But as the title suggests, she's shifted her focus from food to drink, choosing a half-dozen bottles of homemade plonk as the catalyst for her "layman's alchemy." And even the narrator is no human being but a faintly tannic Fleurie 1962: "A pert, garrulous wine, cheery and little brash, with a pungent taste of blackcurrant!"

There are, of course, some less vinous characters in the novel. Harris's protagonist, Jay Mackintosh, is a former literary star, now sadly stalled. He spends his time writing second-rate science fiction, leading a hollow media life, and drinking: "Not to forget, but to remember, to open up the past and find himself there again." Yet the nice, expensive wines don't do the trick. Instead, six "Specials"--a gift from his old friend Joe--function as Jay's magical elixir. Like Proust's lime-blossom tisane, they give him the gift of his memories but also unlock his future, which encourages him to flee the rut of his London life and buy a house in Lansquenet.

As Jay settles in, he contemplates his childhood friendship with Joe, whose idiosyncratic outlook was the inspiration for his only successful book. Meanwhile, he becomes involved in village life, encountering some familiar faces from Chocolat. Caro and Toinette, the snooty troublemakers, soon put in an appearance, and Josephine, the bar owner and battered wife of the earlier novel, becomes a real friend. But it's a new character, the enigmatic Marise, who becomes the focus of Jay's attention--and who helps to restore his literary joie de vivre. This feat of resurrection makes for a hugely enjoyable read. It also goes one step further in adding Lansquenet to the map of imaginary destinations, where daydreams can come true with intoxicating frequency. --Eithne Farry

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