“Land.
Up home, on Big Pine and places like it, the land was where you were born and buried. Where you lived and died. The land was beautiful and harsh and, in its own bitersweet way, the thing that made you. In all seasons and all phases of the moon. It's where you planted and harvested, and it's where you were planted and harvested.
But not in town, not in Asheville. Land in town was a commodity - to be bought, sold, and traded. And God help you if you held onto a parcel long enough to like it, let alone love it. Land was meant to be kept moving, just like money, because it was money.
Up home, the land was a lover, even if a rough one at times; in town, land was a whore, bought and sold.”- Terry Roberts, The Sky Club 🌅
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Jo Salter sets about constructing a new life for herself in Asheville from the BC mountains in the wake of her mother’s death. Jo is a mathematical genius. Working as a teller at Central Bank & Trust she recreates herself and rises through the professional ranks.
When the Great Depression brings Central B&T down in a seismic crash, Jo is forced to find a new home and job. She finds both at the Sky Club, an infamous speakeasy and jazz club on the mountainside above town. She strikes a partnership with the manager, Levi Arrowood, as she gets drawn into the glamorous and precarious life of bootlegging, jazz, and love.
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Jo was a GREAT main character, I loved her! I also loved Levi and how much he respected Jo and her intellect. Knowing this took place during the 1920s crash and 1930s Great Depression, I assumed this would be a story of loss. Roberts surprised me and instead made this a story of how to survive and even thrive in even the most adverse circumstances.
💜 Thank you to @turnerpub for a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review 💜