This is book 6 of the series and the title is quite apt. It is early summer in Thrush Green. Jenny, live-in maid and friend of Winnie Bailey, gets chicken pox and is pretty ill for a while. Percy Hodge, a local farmer, begins courting her, bringing her eggs, flowers, fruit and other delectable samples of her potential future. Winnie sends her to the seaside to recuperate and visit an old friend who lives there. They discuss whether she wants to marry at all; she can’t imagine being happier than she is already.
The Fuchsia Bush café is the object of vexation of the ladies of Lulling and Thrush when they stop serving afternoon tea. 😱 Instead, they begin closing after lunch and reopening for dinner. Ella Bembridge in particular predicts that it won’t last - tourists want afternoon tea, and for that matter, so do ladies who have been doing the weekly shopping! As it turns out, Ella is right - by autumn (when the book ends), the Fuchsia Bush once again is open daily until 6pm.
Dotty Harmer has been showing her age, and one day when she stops at Winnie Bailey’s house, she is confused and delirious. Winnie calls Dr. Lovell, who admits her to hospital for severe malnutrition. Dotty’s niece, Connie, comes to help out when her aunt is finally released. Dotty comes to realize she needs to cut back on the number of animals, which she does. By the end of the book, Dotty is needing a full-time companion, so Connie sells her own home and comes to make her home with Dotty.
The most shocking event is the destruction of the rectory in a fire. Luckily, Charles and Dimity we’re away at the time, having just left for a holiday in Yorkshire. Edward Young, the architect, is secretly happy - he has always hated the ugly Victorian eyesore in the village of mostly lively Georgian homes. And to prove the adage that “it’s an ill wind that blows nobody good,” Charles is “promoted” to the priest over a new combined parish and will be living at Lulling Vicarage, a beautiful home! Dimity is so happy that Charles has to offer his handkerchief.
Miss Watson and Miss Fogerty are retiring from the school and are looking for a cottage at Barton on Sea. Percy Hodge eventually gets engaged to Doris, a barmaid at the Drovers Arms in Lulling. And Ben and Molly Curdle welcome a new baby girl, whom they name Anne in honor of Ben’s grandmother who was beloved by the entire village.