The title is drawn from a haunting quote that prefaces the novel. It reads, in part, "...and you'll be there, forever expecting a great misfortune, in sunlight, in a beautiful garden." It was this line that compelled me to carry the book to the checkout line, knowing it would be more than just a history of the horrific Johnstown, Pennsylvania flood. The quote and title establish the mood of what's to come: a sun-filled romance overlaid with foreboding, as Gilded Age privilege and hubris collide with the interests of ordinary people. Upriver from working-class Johnstown, the American robber barons whose wealth came in part from the steel mills where Johnstown men risked their lives every day, built a "rustic" exclusive summer camp. Its luxurious lodge and cabins were built on the shore of a huge man-made lake, held back by a primitive and poorly maintained earthen dam upriver from the narrow valley where Johnstown was located. The protagonists of the fact-based novel's central romance are a young man of working- class parents, and a girl whose well-to-do father is associated with the club that owns the lake. As an innocent flirtation develops into something deeper, the girl's father has grown increasingly concerned about weaknesses in the dam and is attempting without success to convince the club members to acknowledge the gravity of the situation and spend a little of their wealth to reinforce the structure. Against the backdrop of the members' splendid mansions and the everyday lives of Johnstown families, the author paints sweetly nostalgic images of innocent love; a final, carefree season at the deadly lake; and the personal lives of a few key characters, oblivious to the dam's inevitable collapse...The Johnstown flood, when it finally came, swept the entire town ahead of it like a tsunami, killing thousands of people whose bodies were entangled in metal, crushed by debris and buried in a sea of mud. Survivors were left homeless and jobless, the mill that was the reason for the town's existence having been destroyed. Many children were orphaned. History tells us that no compensation to the victims was required of the dam's negligent owners, who numbered among their membership the wealthiest men in America. They did, however, organize a relief effort that donated blankets. Yes, blankets. You can learn that much about the Johnstown disaster with a Google search. What you will find in the pages of this novel are vivid reasons to grieve and rage: young lovers, parents working to send a son to college, babies in their cribs. None of them expecting their great misfortune.