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The scent keeper  Cover Image Book Book

The scent keeper / Erica Bauermeister.

Summary:

Emmeline lives an enchanted childhood on a remote island with her father, who teaches her about the natural world through her senses but what he won't explain are the mysterious scents stored in the drawers that line the walls of their cabin, or the origin of the machine that creates them. As Emmeline grows, however, so too does her curiosity, until one day the unforeseen happens, and Emmeline is vaulted out into the real world - a place of love, betrayal, ambition, and revenge. To understand her past, Emmeline must unlock the clues to her identity.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781250200136
  • ISBN: 125020013X
  • Physical Description: 311 pages ; 25 cm
  • Edition: First edition.
  • Publisher: New York : St. Martin's Press, 2019.
Subject: Smell > Fiction.
Families > Fiction.
Fathers and daughters > Fiction.
Islands > Fiction.
Magic realism (Literature)
Genre: Bildungsromans.

Available copies

  • 24 of 24 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Beaver Valley Public Library.

Holds

  • 2 current holds with 24 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Beaver Valley Public Library F BAU (Text) 35144000203567 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2019 April #2
    For the longest time, Emmeline knew nothing of the world besides what her father had taught her. On a remote island, only accessible by small boat during the slack tide of a full moon, Emmeline and her father live and learn together: foraging and fishing, drying and curing. Without a formal education but years ahead of her peers in her understanding of the natural world, Emmeline is content with this nontraditional life. When her father's mental health declines and a horrible series of events results in his death, Emmeline has to learn how to function in contemporary society. Her entrance into the mainstream world doesn't come easily, but a hidden talent surprises everyone around her and paves the way for her future success. This coming-of-age story delights the senses, immersing the reader in the sights, sounds, and scents of the wilderness and city life. Fans of Mary Simses and Jennifer Close will fall in love with Bauermeister's plucky heroine, the layers of family secrets, the lush settings, and the painfully tender relationships. Copyright 2019 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2019 June
    Summer reading 2019: Your sweetest escape

    Summer days were made for getting lost in a good book. We've gathered a few of the season's hottest novels—stories of romance, adventure and suspense—that are just right for whiling away a few lazy hours. Grab a cold drink, find a spot in the shade, and get ready to read.


    Cape May
    By Chip Cheek

    In Chip Cheek's debut novel, the year is 1957. Young Henry and Effie from tiny Signal Creek, Georgia, are on a two-week honeymoon in Cape May, New Jersey. By the end of their first awkward week of marriage, Effie wants to go home early, and Henry, defeated, assents. But the night before they are to leave this coastal ghost town, they spot signs of life—signs of a party, no less—and decide to stop in. Cheek paints a graphic and sensuous portrait of an fragile marriage embattled well before its time. Cape May is a besotted picnic of a novel—day-drunk and languid, shadowed by ever-threatening storm clouds. —Kathryn Justice Leache


    Cari Mora
    By Thomas Harris
    If it's a thriller you seek for summer reading, look no further than Cari Mora by Thomas Harris, author of The Silence of the Lambs and Hannibal Rising. Beautiful young Cari Mora is an immigrant caretaker of a house in Miami Beach with a fortune hidden beneath it: millions of dollars in cartel gold. When Hans-Peter Schneider—a psychopath who thrives on violence—comes after the treasure, he develops a sinister interest in Cari. But she's a fighter at heart, has experienced war and knows how to look after herself. Harris explores the dark side of human passion in this pulse-pounding novel. His first book in 13 years, Cari Mora will not disappoint fans of disturbing, taut thrillers. —Julie Hale


    The Flatshare
    By Beth O'Leary
    If the idea of flatmates sharing a bed at alternate hours without meeting sounds too far-fetched, hold your skepticism. If it sounds like a meet-cute waiting to happen, you're in luck. Regardless of your starting point, The Flatshare is a charming love story to warm your heart. After Tiffy's boyfriend dumps her, she's desperate to find a new flat. Night nurse Leon needs extra cash, and he's willing to get creative. The flatmates follow a strict schedule to ensure that they won't overlap, but as they begin to get to know each other through notes, their curiosity about each other grows. Even skeptical readers will be surprised by the thoughtful way Beth O'Leary faces not only new love but also the traces of individual pasts. —Carla Jean Whitley


    How Not to Die Alone
    By Richard Roper

    Filled with humor and heart, How Not to Die Alone, Richard Roper's debut novel, tells the story of Andrew, a solitary soul whose public health job entails tracking down the next of kin of people who die alone. Due to a misunderstanding, Andrew's co-workers think he's a happily married father of two. In truth, his only family is a distant sister, and he leads a generally isolated existence. When Peggy joins his team at work, Andrew feels an attraction that she seems to share. But coming clean about his life could mean the end of his career and his reputation. What's a lonely guy to do? A brisk, compelling read, Roper's book is a rom-com with substance. —Julie Hale


    Into the Jungle
    By Erica Ferencik
    Delve into the heart of the Amazon in Erica Ferencik's second action-packed thriller. In 2010, while living in a hostel in Cochabamba, Bolivia, Lily Bushwold, a Boston native, meets Omar, an Amazon hunter turned motorcycle mechanic. Two scrappy yet tender kindred spirits, they quickly fall in love. When Omar is summoned back to his jungle village, Ayachero, to avenge his mourning family, Lily accompanies him. Little does she know it's not just Omar she follows, but a mystical calling to discover her ca'ah, her life's purpose, intrinsically bound up with the fragile jungle ecosystem. A chilling journey into jungle life, Into the Jungle is also a deep probe into environmental ethics and love. —Mari Carlson


    Monsieur Mediocre
    By John von Sothen
    Ah, Paris! There's no city quite like it. And these days, when Americans are finding vacations as scarce as video rental stores, it's hard not to look with longing at the six weeks' getaway still in vogue across the pond. But American-­born columnist John von Sothen didn't come to France for the vacations. Fifteen years ago, he fell in love with a French actress and moved to Paris. Now the father of two teens, he has penned an entertaining memoir of his life as a husband, father and constantly surprised expat. Monsieur Mediocre offers thoughtful observations about everything from politics to family life with irresistible charm. —Deborah Hopkinson


    Mr. Know-It-All
    By John Waters

    If you're a person who's easily offended, take it from me: Don't even read the reviews, much less crack open the cover of John Waters' latest book. A whip-smart (he'd no doubt like that description), funny, multitalented and unique cultural icon, Waters is also an artist and book collector, and these essays reflect his endless assortment of interests—ranging from his movie-making memories (Patty Hearst thought he was kidding when he asked her to be in a movie) to his planning of and taking what he calls "a senior-citizen acid trip." While it's certainly not a book for everyone, Waters' legion of admirers will be lining up in droves to hop aboard the Mr. Know-It-All bus. —Alice Cary


    Mrs. Everything
    By Jennifer Weiner
    At the outset, Jennifer Weiner's new novel pays homage to Little Women: Older sister Jo, a tomboy and athlete, wants to be a writer, while younger sister Bethie just wants to be a sweet, pretty daughter. But in Alcott terms, these two sisters are more like Jo and Amy—sometimes they just don't get along. Mrs. Everything follows the two sisters from their Jewish girlhood in post-World War II Detroit through the present and into the near future, 71 years in all. With its long timespan and focus on cultural change, Mrs. Everything is a departure for Weiner, but she still delivers flawed but approachable female characters, well-­examined friendships and romantic relationships and often-joyful sex scenes. —Sarah McCraw Crow


    Natalie Tan's Book of Luck and Fortune
    By Roselle Lim
    Summer beckons a reading list that is as light, fun and feel-good as the season itself. Roselle Lim's Natalie Tan's Book of Luck and Fortune definitely fits that need. Set in San Francisco's Chinatown, Lim's debut is the story of 20-something Natalie, who has just returned home to the worst news possible: the unexpected passing of her mother, Miranda. Her shock and sadness are compounded by the guilt of parting ways seven years ago over a disagreement which now seems extraneous. But this is a story of luck and fortune, so it isn't long before Natalie is given a chance to fix it all. —Chika Gujarathi


    Necessary People
    By Anna Pitoniak
    Two complex women inhabit Necessary People, Anna Pitoniak's second psychologically astute novel. College graduates Stella Bradley and Violet Trapp have become the closest of friends, though they're opposites in so many ways. When their longtime friendship gives way to ambition, Pitoniak perceptively traces the fracture of their sisterlike bond, leading to a denouement the reader will not anticipate. An insightful glimpse into the competitive world of TV news and Pitoniak's spot-on portraits of these two women come together in a gripping novel that's sure to be a popular summer read. —Deborah Donovan


    Nuking the Moon
    By Vince Houghton
    One category of "beach read" that's criminally neglected is the "dad beach read." Vince Houghton tackles this genre head-on in his curious, delightful new book, Nuking the Moon. At the height of World War II and the Cold War, national governments the world over devised missions and schemes that never came to fruition—because they were very bad. Houghton, a curator at the International Spy Museum in Washington, roasts these failed plots one by one. "Why not use a live cat to spy on the Russians?" someone at the CIA once asked without a hint of irony. "I'll tell you exactly why," Houghton responds, to readers' delight. —Christy Lynch


    Out East
    By John Glynn
    This memoir relates the travails of a group of privileged New England kids as they navigate an indulgent, raucous summer in Montauk in their late 20s. (Of course, references to The Great Gatsby abound.) When feelings for a male friend develop into something more, author John Glynn finds himself bearing the weight of a secret about his sexual identity. What follows is a charming portrait of how deeply human it is to be uncertain, to be driving a hundred miles an hour toward nowhere and longing to have a buddy in the car. Out East is a heart-wrenching reminder of the precarious emotional inner life that undulates just beneath the surface, even for people who seem as though they have it all. —Kelly Blewett


    Passion on Park Avenue
    By Lauren Layne

    The title says it all: Passion on Park Avenue by Lauren Layne is a Big Apple romance brimming with sophisticated fun. At 29, Naomi Powell is spirited, independent and oh-so-successful. The daughter of a housekeeper, she holds the rank of CEO at a major jewelry company—a position that gives her access to the rarefied world of the Upper East Side. Yet Naomi isn't quite accepted by the city's well-to-do. When handsome Oliver Cunningham—the son of a family who once employed her mother—enters the picture, she has a new distraction on her hands. The first entry in Layne's new Central Park Pact Series, Passion on Park Avenue is the perfect summer escape. —Julie Hale


    Recursion
    By Blake Crouch
    Blake Crouch's follow-up to his breakout bestseller, Dark Matter, has an instantly compelling premise—across the country, people have begun experiencing vivid, emotional memories of alternate lives. Solving the mystery of False Memory Syndrome would be enough to drive Recursion forward, but the second you think the book has settled into a holding pattern, it pinwheels off in an entirely unexpected direction. Early on, Crouch lets the reader in on the secret of the syndrome's origins through frequent flashbacks to 11 years before the disease started to spread, and the two timelines play off each other in increasingly poignant ways. It's early, but Recursion may be the smartest, most surprising thriller of the summer. —Savanna Walker


    The Scent Keeper
    By Erica Bauermeister

    Emmeline and her scientist father live a somewhat idyllic, if Spartan, existence on a remote island off Canada's west coast. He's invented a mysterious machine, the Nightingale, a kind of olfactory Polaroid camera that captures scent moments on specialized paper. But paradise, like childhood, has a fixed term, and one traumatic incident whisks Emmeline off her island into a society that she finds finds both intriguing and terrifying. Reminiscent of Vianne Rocher from Joanne Harris' beloved Chocolat, Emmeline is persistent, engaging and a savant in her chosen field. All she has to do is to take her father's advice: follow her nose, and then get out of its way. —Thane Tierney


    Stay Sexy and Don't Get Murdered
    By Karen Kilgariff & Georgia Hardstark
    Fans of the wildly popular "My Favorite Murder" podcast already know the heart, hilarity and horror embodied by hosts Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark. But even those who have been living under a rock will enjoy their new book, Stay Sexy and Don't Get Murdered. Kilgariff and Hardstark delve into comedy's darker, more vulnerable underbelly in these essays, detailing adolescent escapades with drugs, creeps, eating disorders and more. Confessional, wise and more than a little obscene, this book is for anyone whose path to adulthood is littered with blunders. These authors will show you how to remember them and laugh. —Christy Lynch


    Summer Hours
    By Amy Mason Doan

    Summer Hours is a sweet, satisfying love story. Growing up, Becc always played by the rules, getting good grades and preparing for a journalism career. But a college romance with the irresistible Cal derailed her plans and damaged an important friendship. Years later, as she travels to California for a wedding, Becc is accompanied by a special guy whom she hasn't seen in ages (we won't spoil the story by revealing his identity!). Memories of the time she spent with him come flooding back, but he doesn't seem to share her enthusiasm for the past. Should Becc ignore her feelings, or follow her heart? Doan spins an unforgettable tale of old-fashioned romance in this winning novel. —Julie Hale


    Time After Time
    By Lisa Grunwald

    Fans of historical fiction will savor Time After Time by Lisa Grunwald. In 1937, Joe, a railway man working in Grand Central Station, crosses paths with Nora, a mysterious young woman who doesn't quite fit in with her surroundings—because she's a ghost. The real Nora was an art student who died in a subway crash in 1925. As a spirit, she reappears in Grand Central Station every now and again, but when she and Joe fall in love, they're determined to find a way to build a life together. An unforgettable tale of otherworldly romance, Grunwald's book is a true page-turner. Pick up a copy and prepare to be transported. —Julie Hale

    Copyright 2019 BookPage Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2019 March #2
    A young girl with a unique talent for identifying scents embarks on a journey of self-discovery when she's ripped from her intensely isolated childhood home. Emmeline has lived with her father on an otherwise uninhabited island in the Pacific Northwest for as long as she can remember. Her father teaches her to read, to forage for food, and to hone her sense of smell. Emmeline doesn't question their isolation, as she's known nothing else. She adores the long days learning from her father, listening to fairy tales, and watching him use his mysterious machine. The machine produces "scent-papers" that her father stashes inside small glass bottles, each paper preserving a one-of-a-kind scent. When tragedy strikes, Emmeline is forced to relocate to the mainland. She is taken in by a kind, childless couple in a seaside village. Similar to a wild animal suddenly brought into captivity, 12-year-old Emmeline struggles to adapt. As she slowly establishes a new life, beginning school and navigating adolescence, questions about her father, her absentee mother, and her own identity continue to grow. The more she learns about her past, the harder it becomes to reconcile her childhood with her future. Told entirely from Emmeline's perspective, the novel contains three distinct sections. The first, where Emmeline is living in the wild, is suffused with wonder and enchantment. The author deftly describes the lush island and the awe of a little girl watching her father fill a cabin with mysterious bottles full of scents and dreams. Once Emmeline moves to the mainland, the patina of her youth wears off, and much of the magic of the story goes with it. Even so, the author's ability to describe scents, the nature in which they evolve, and how deeply they are tied to memory and emotion provides sufficient heft to keep the novel engaging and worthwhile. Told in a lyrical, haunting prose, the story provides fascinating information about the ways in which different fragr a nces can impact human behavior and the struggles of finding one's own identity. An artfully crafted coming-of-age story that will take the reader on an exquisite olfactory adventure. Copyright Kirkus 2019 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2019 April #3

    In this magical novel, Bauermeister (The School of Essential Ingredients) transports readers to a secluded island in the Pacific Northwest where a girl is raised alone by her father. Emmeline has always lived alone with her scientist father on an island where he collects and studies scents that he preserves in small glass bottles. Emmeline is completely shut off from the modern world and believes mermaids bring them supplies. That fantasy is shattered when Emmeline sees a man named Henry leaving packages on the beach, and, angry about having been lied to, she begins throwing her father's vials over a bluff. Her father plunges to his death trying to recover one special vial. In the book's second part, with the help of Henry and his wife, Colette, Emmeline, now a teenager, clumsily navigates her new reality living in a small coastal town outside Vancouver. While Emmeline adjusts to simple things such as using a stove, she helps Henry run his boardinghouse, starts studying with Colette, and yearns for the scents locked in her father's vials. As she gets older, she slowly begins to uncover the past her father had been desperately been trying to seal away. Blending fantasy with a realist family drama, Bauermeister's novel will enchant fans of Katherine Paterson. (May)

    Copyright 2019 Publishers Weekly.

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