Rhetoric of Roots
(2026)(The third book in the Bracken Cove series)
A novel by Livia Huntingdon-Jones
Isla Rhys-Jones is a woman of letters, logic, and very specific definitions. An Oxford-educated linguist living in the salt-crusted town of Bracken Cove, Maine, Isla’s life is a perfectly structured sentence. She has her research, her tweed blazers, and her husband Frank'''a mechanic who speaks in monosyllables but fixes things with the soul of a poet.
But then, the "Hyperbole of Hollywood" arrives.
A film crew descends to turn their "weathered" town into a cinematic metaphor, bringing with them rubber lobsters, synthetic fog, and a leading man determined to "osmose" Frank’s rugged authenticity. As the town's identity is rewritten for the screen, Isla is grappling with an unscripted edit of her own: a secret pregnancy that threatens to erase the "Academic Isla" she spent years building.
When a real storm collides with the fake one, leading to a catastrophic fire at the town's historical archive, Isla must step out of the margins. In the face of a community under siege, she discovers that some things can’t be editedand that the most important chapters are the ones we never saw coming.
Will Isla let the "Mother" overwrite the "Scholar," or can she find the perfect synthesis in a town that refuses to be a footnote?
Genre: Romance
But then, the "Hyperbole of Hollywood" arrives.
A film crew descends to turn their "weathered" town into a cinematic metaphor, bringing with them rubber lobsters, synthetic fog, and a leading man determined to "osmose" Frank’s rugged authenticity. As the town's identity is rewritten for the screen, Isla is grappling with an unscripted edit of her own: a secret pregnancy that threatens to erase the "Academic Isla" she spent years building.
When a real storm collides with the fake one, leading to a catastrophic fire at the town's historical archive, Isla must step out of the margins. In the face of a community under siege, she discovers that some things can’t be editedand that the most important chapters are the ones we never saw coming.
Will Isla let the "Mother" overwrite the "Scholar," or can she find the perfect synthesis in a town that refuses to be a footnote?
Genre: Romance
Used availability for Livia Huntingdon-Jones's Rhetoric of Roots