"The Wildwater Walking Club: Step by Step"
By Claire Cook
August 30, 2020
Marshbury Beach Books
274 pages
Contemporary Women's Fiction
Noreen, Tess, and Rosie, three middle-aged besties and neighbors in the coastal town of Marshbury, Massachusetts have their Fitbits calibrated to brave the chill of the predawn autumn to get in their steps along with some very intense girl talk.
It has been a year-and-a-half since Noreen lost her job and her boyfriend, and with the passing of time, she descends deeper into a stage of despair. Her employment buyout is almost depleted, and all she can envision is living in a tent on the side of the road. The time spent with Rosie and Tess helps to dispel her depression, but she needs to pick up the pieces and start fresh.
Rosie runs a lavender farm which is a huge undertaking and now she is overwhelmed because her dad and Noreen's mom are shacking up at her place. Tess, an inveterate schoolteacher is always ready, willing, and able to share pertinent facts about different subjects with her friends, sometimes, ad nauseam, yet offer reassurance to Noreen.
Meeting in the early morning hours to walk along the beach, they discuss their problems, ideas, hopes, and dreams. While Noreen realizes she must come up with a new career path, her attitude is somewhat tiring and argumentative. She is even arguing with her new beau, Rick which may not bode well for their relationship.
Noreen is happy that Rick has found his niche by creating concrete sculptures, but what is her niche? When she visits Rick's studio, she encounters a gorgeous woman named Alison who seems to make herself right at home. Has Rick moved on? Can anything else ruin Noreen's self-esteem?
Rick shows her his latest creation that calls "Noreen." These are designed in her likeness. Her head and neck are embedded with different colored sea glass in the cement, the scooped-out head contains plants, and reading glasses are perched on the nose. Instead of being flattered, Noreen is insulted. She tosses some harsh words at him which she knows hurt Rick's feelings. Imagine her surprise when she later after walking with the girls she finds six "Noreen's" gracing each side of her walkway, with the original on her front step.
Tess reads the tag hanging from the nearest sculpture to her: "The Noreen—an adored goddess to bring beauty and good vibes into your garden and your life. Limited edition by a new local artist. Signed and numbered."
Can Noreen feel any worse? Berating herself, she falls into a deeper funk, and before long she thinks she's being brushed off by her friends who walk without her:
Once I'd caught Tess and Rosie finishing our regularly scheduled walk, our tradition, our commitment, without me yesterday, I'd stalled as long as I could. I wanted to make sure I gave Tess plenty of time to head off to school and Rosie to disappear into her work day. Somehow I thought the whole thing would be less pathetic if they didn't know I knew.
So I made myself hang around to watch the sunrise. The ocean turned from black to blue. A gold sphere lit up the sky like a fortune teller's ball without any answers. And all I could think was, they planned this. They had an actual conversation during which they decided to walk early. So they didn't have to walk with me.
She wants to crawl into bed and pull the covers over her head, but instead, she hikes aimlessly until she can go no further. This is when she remembers the new venture she's starting. Trained as a health coach, she signed up a new client, named Joel, which should help her pocketbook and her self-esteem, but other than him, she does nothing to increase this business.
As Noreen wallows in self-pity, people stop to ask about buying a sculpture though she wants to return them to Rick. One day she discovers three are missing. They've garnered interest, but who would be so brazen as to come on her property and steal them?
The friends reunite and decide they need a diversion—they plan their first "Wildwater Walking Club coddiwomple!" Noreen explains: "A coddiwomple is when you travel in a purposeful manner toward a vague destination."
Rosie says, "I think I'd prefer to go on "flumadiddle," which she says is "something completely nonsensical or ridiculous." They hit the road with no specific goal in mind, just wanting to get away, forget their worries, and enjoy each other's company.
They head for Cape Cod and amid the glorious panorama of Nature's fall color, explore different sites and venues. At a cranberry farm, they discuss how they're grown and harvested, and made into many products, some of which they buy, considering Christmas is approaching.
Visiting the Cape Cod Lavender Farm excites Rosie, and they trek through the twelve acres and purchase different offerings from the gift shop before wandering on to other sites. Finally, they stop at the well-known Hot Chocolate Sparrow restaurant for a mouthwatering lunch. Noreen has an epiphany and tells her friends about her training, mentioning the Japanese notion of "ikigai", which means one needs a reason for living and the happiness to always be busy. Noreen now knows what to do to change her life.
In this third installment in the Wildwater Walking Club series, Cook applies her usual humor and cleverness. She describes Cape Cod somewhat like a guided tour offering the historic beauty and nuances of the area, which is so beautifully written and described, one would want to venture there. In addition to the colorful locations depicted and the well-fleshed characters, the bond between the three women is profound as they share an inseparable closeness. Their friendship is vital and important, yet the reader feels part of their unit as they giggle, concoct silly plans, support each other, and have a great time, always knowing they can count on each other for anything. This is a definite feel-good read.