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Reviews - Full Circle
Full Circle - ReviewTheBook
Written by Betty Gelean   
Full Circle by Nancy Gettelman

If I were to consider this book as a person, I would have to say it was warm and comfortable, like enjoying a friend's company.  But first, the reader learns that life for the characters hasn't always been that way.

Sara, the main character, has just caught a glimpse while driving home of someone she thinks could be her long-missing and presumed dead husband.  Her daughter on the same day, coming from grocery shopping is sure she has seen her father. Sara has never gone into details with Emma about what happened before his disappearance. The first few chapters are the memories of Sara as she reminisces about the past. Her life in Milwaukee, her childhood, her part in the family brewery, and her failing marriage.

Fast forward: With a rocky and unhappy background set at the beginning of the book, the story moves on as the reader is taken into the workings of the brewery owned by generations of Sara's family, and her life as a middle-aged businesswoman. Her daughter grown, a lawyer, and married, Sara has settled into the daily life of president of the family business. Although this is a city brewery, the camaraderie throughout of the employees and board is much like a small family-run atmosphere, but as often appears in every group, with the traditional prickly thorn. This particular prickly thorn is a family member, and also on the board.

Nancy Gettelman obviously is very knowledgeable about breweries, the descriptions so vivid I could almost hear the bottles rattling! I love books that are entertaining but where I can also learn something new.

But time works its way into the building and equipment rendering them gradually no longer viable, and after the long haul, Sara and her Uncle Vincent have concluded they must sell the brewery they can no longer afford to maintain.  Into Sara's life comes a reason to be happy again and perhaps find new life along with the changes that are about to happen to the brewery.  Changes that are more than satisfactory to all but the thorny dissenter, who opts out by selling his shares and retiring to Northern Wisconsin.

I love the way the reader is privy to the thoughts in Sara's mind, often at odds with what her words are saying. Particularly once she meets Robb Schneider, who has made a very good offer on the brewery, and still wishes to have the family involved. Only now does Sara appear to wake from the nightmare of her unresolved marriage and what has happened to Kyle, her former husband. Like moving into a new dream, she suddenly finds herself lacking confidence in her personal life, shy and afraid of saying or doing the wrong thing or sending the wrong message.

With encouragement from family friends and relatives, including her daughter Emma, she feels a great load has lifted and happiness can be hers. With an unexpected resolution, an announcement from Emma, an answer to the glimpses of Kyle, and new beginnings for Sara, she looks forward to a brighter future as she is finally able to put the past behind her.

The book is well-written with fully-fledged characters, a strong, balanced plot, and a consistent storyline. It flows very well regardless of jumping about 20 years ahead partway through the book; in a way it flows better because of this and the way it was handled. It's so refreshing to read a book of this type with the main character middle-aged, strong yet vulnerable, and with an exciting future ahead of her.  Full Circle gets the story right, well done Nancy Gettelman!



Reviewed on 06/15/2010 by ReviewTheBook.com Member Betty Gelean
 
Goodreads Review - Full Circle
Written by Dan Albert   
The Reviewer is Dan Albert and he posted it on Goodreads:
 
"Full Circle" by Nancy Gettelman
 
It didn't take me long to read this fascinating story, and I really enjoyed it. The chapters are short, and the pace is fast: truly a page turner.  On the back of the book, the genre is listed as "Romance/Mystery." Although romance is not my favorite genre, mystery is.
 
I thought the protagonists seemed alive, as I could see actual  people in my life who resembled them. So the story is believable and very plausible.
 
The author did an excellent job in writing this tale, and I can't wait to read another one of her works. I highly recommend this book to those who love a good romance with a flair for mystery.
 
Four stars
 
Full Circle Review

 

 

Looking for something to fill the time waiting for customers at the breweriana show? Tired of watching mediocre sit-com reruns during lulls in room-to-room trading? Or simply looking for an enjoyable book for a quiet evening? How about a suspenseful combination of history and intrigue set in and around a Milwaukee brewery? There is no discovery of a secret treasure map on the back of a brewery scene lithograph to parallel the movie National Treasure, but Full Circle by Nancy Gettelman offers a suspenseful mix of history, intrigue and beer.

Readers of this publication probably know Nancy Gettelman best as the author of A History of the A. Gettelman Brewing Co. However, that is only one of her six books, and the only one that features breweriana prominently, but a brewery is at the center of her latest novel, Full Circle.

As Sara Rebstock was stuck in Milwaukee traffic, she saw someone who looked strikingly like her husband Kyle, who had disappeared twenty years earlier and was presumed dead. She was not hallucinating, because her adult daughter Emma had the same experience that day. Was Kyle still alive, and if so, what was going on? If not, who is this person? Attempting to find the answer requires Sara to revisit the events surrounding Kyle’s disappearance.

Sara had worked at her family-owned brewery for years, and had gotten her somewhat less than satisfactory husband Kyle a job there. (The Streicher Brewery bears more than a passing resemblance to the Gettelman Brewing Co., which lends an air of authenticity to the descriptions.) When her parents died and she ascended to the brewery presidency, she turned the job over to Kyle hoping it would settle him down. Instead, he antagonized the other remaining family members, Uncle Vincent and Cousin Louis, and had a relationship with the female brewmaster that went much too far. Just prior to Kyle’s disappearance he had disputes with several people at the brewery, including one with Louis which involved the removal of several old files of papers on the brewery’s history. As a brewerianaist, I naturally wondered if these files contained lots of crisp pre-Prohibition letterhead—but that isn’t central to the plot.

To reveal any more of the story would ruin the suspense, but I can reveal more about the style of the novel. Gettelman writes easily and clearly, and has a gift for making characters believable. She engages the reader—not through over-dramatizing, but by making the reader actually care about what happens next on a more personal level. She shows her skill as a storyteller by weaving in discussion of Milwaukee landmarks, local history and brewing science smoothly and naturally. While not a Milwaukee native, she describes the city with the easy familiarity of a long-time resident and has an sense for what a visitor would want to know. She consulted several people in the brewing industry to make sure her accounts were correct and took a number of brewery tours to make sure scenes inside the brewery felt authentic.

Publishers need to put books in categories for marketing purposes, and a novel like this shows how difficult that task is for many works of fiction. In the author biography, Full Circle is called a suspense, and on the back cover it is listed as romance/mystery. There are no steamy love scenes, no all-knowing detectives and the missing person case does not develop into a series of ever-more gruesome murders. Is it possible to create a category for “good story?” Because that is what Full Circle is—a good story.

 


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