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Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9781931513371 ISBN: 1931513376 Label: Bella Books Manufacturer: Bella Books Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 240 Publication Date: 2003-12 Publisher: Bella Books Studio: Bella Books Editorial Review: Product Description: Twenty-nine-year-old Rayann Germaine, betrayed by her lover, flees in grief and rage. She meets rare book store owner Louisa Thatcher, a woman many years her senior, who offers shelter and work... and soon, passion, and a loving place in her life. But Rayann encounters challenges to this new love -- from friends who question its wisdom, from her mother who disapproves of this liaison with a woman her own contemporary, from Louisa's son who learns for the first time his mother's true sexuality. And there are profound differences between Rayann and Louisa themselves, two women who come from dramatically different places in the spectrum of age and life experience. The first page will draw you into this entertaining, erotic, thought-provoking exploration of love, and of that landscape of the mind known as age. Related Items: Average Rating:
![]() Rating: - A Wonderful ReadThis was my first Kallmaker book. I found it thoroughly entertaining! She makes her characters very human; thus they are easy to relate to. I can't wait to get my hands on more of her books! Rating: - Classic Kallmaker Strikes Again...The text from the back cover is not currently available on this page, so I'm adding it first below. BACK COVER TEXT Twenty-nine-year-old Rayann Germaine, betrayed by her lover, flees in grief and rage. She meets rare book store owner Louisa Thatcher, a woman many years her senion, who offers shelter and work... and soon, passion, and a loving place in her life. But Rayann encounters challenges to this new love-- from friends who question its wisdom, from her mother who disapproves of this liaison with a woman her own contemporary, from Louisa's son who learns for the first time his mother's true sexuality. And there are profound differences between Rayann and Louisa themselves, two women who come from dramatically different places in the spectrum of age and life experience. Setting her story in today's ever-changing environs fo California's Bay Area, Karin Kallmaker brings her talent to full flower in this entertaining, erotic, thought-provoking exploration of love, and of that landscape of the mind known as age. END OF BACK COVER TEXT Karin Kallmaker is one of my favorite authors in this genre. She never fails to deliver a great story, albeit a story that is almost always pure formula. 'Touchwood' is equally as good as her other works, but it seems to stray from that formula just a little bit. This provides a refreshing new aspect this reader wasn't expecting. The biggest hurdle for the reader seems to be acceptance of the age issue between the two main characters, Rayann and Louisa. Rayann is 27. Louisa is twice that and has a son older than Rayann. I like older women, but had a hard time getting over the huge age difference. Therefore, I cheated and pictured Rayann about 15 years older, shrinking the age difference to 12 years. This tactic didn't take away from the story and made it much easier for me to enjoy. This was the only reason I gave it 4 stars instead of 5. 'Touchwood' is a must own book and a great addition to any bookshelf. Rating: - A True Classic!I read this novel quite a few years back and read it again just recently. Karin never disappoints even the second time around. Katie P. Moore Author Southern Heart Rating: - This novel is as needed today as it was in 1991!It is ironic that Touchwood, published in 1991 and presaging Karin Kallmaker's vast range in her so-called "formula" romances, is still as needed today as it was 15 years ago. The whole underlying point of the novel, aside from a sexy, entertaining tale of a young woman's search for romance, is that young woman's - and the reader's - coming to understand what life was like for those lesbians who came before her. She is falling in love with one of those pioneers, a lesbian who survived the closets, stereotypes and vicious social stigmas of the 50s, 60s and 70s. Rayann, a creature of the gay 90s where it was possible to have - and want! -- nothing but lesbian friends, and hang out only in lesbian places, just doesn't "get" why Louisa, her senior by 26 years, was ever in the closet. Doesn't "get" Louisa's stomping butch best friend, Danny, who was butch and not gonna hide it even during times when not wearing 3 items of women's clothing could get you arrested. Rayann doesn't "get" why Louisa would pretend to be femme for her lesbian social circle, because that is what her social circle demanded of her, since she was a mother. In one wonderful, telling exchange, Rayann even asks Louisa how she could stand living that way. Louisa's reply is forthright: she was as safe and out as she could possibly be, living under those strictures with a young chlid, living an unheard of dream of a shared life with her first long-term love, helped by friends she loved and needed. There was nothing to "stand." She was *happy* in a world determined not to let her even exist. So today, 15 years after this novel was penned, we have a reader who doesn't "get" how Rayann could be attracted to Louisa as anything but a mother figure. Doesn't "get" the metaphors about how stereotypes both within and outside the community have shaped our identity. Doesn't even "get" how 15 years ago Rayann was happily surrounded with her lesbian world, like that's a bad thing! Rayann's immersion into the out and proud gay 90s is what keeps Rayann from seeing that not everybody gets to live that way, challenging her to find empathy. More ironically, this reader doesn't "get" that Louisa's absent voice in this novel is a reflection of how society renders women over 50 sexless and voiceless. As Rayann learns Louisa's history, she sees Louisa more and more clearly. And we the readers can follow that same journey of learning and exploration. Unless, of course, a reader just doesn't "get" it. Unfortunately, that reader didn't stick around for the payoff, the delightful turn of events when Rayann discovers that she can barely keep up with Louisa in bed, and comes to realize that Louisa is, simply, a Woman of Quality. Vital, sexual, intelligent, committed, loyal - Louisa is a catch-and-a-half for the vastly less experienced Rayann, not the other way around. Rayann's subsequent feelings of inferiority become another interesting theme in the book, and in short stories written after the close of this novel, and its heart-breaking, soaring sequel Watermark, it is plain that Louisa deepened and enriched Rayann's life and character immeasurably. (I do advise anyone who reads and loves Touchwood to let some time pass before reading Watermark. It's devastating at times, and at others, funny and romantic in different ways.) When I first read Touchwood I identified with Rayann. My copy was growing tattered and so I was pleased to acquire a new copy with a beautiful new cover when it was reissued. I laughed all over again in the scene when Rayann, mending her broken heart early on, seems to find herself noticing every single woman she sees. I have been there in my life, when the light on a stocking-clad leg or a bare shoulder stopped me in my tracks with appreciation for how beautiful all women can be. In my recent re-reading, all these years later, I identified with Louisa's silent strength and her attempt to resist her love for Rayann, believing that as a woman of 56, she did not deserve the love of the much younger woman. That is a *lot* to get from a so-called formula romance, that spoke to me all those years ago and speaks to me again, even though I and society have changed. This was and IS a phenomonal book about age, society and ageism, from a writer then only 31 herself. It's also an entertaining, humorous romance with a wonderful, uplifting ending. 5 stars seems inadequate, but it's the most I can give! Rating: - Fantastic Romance that you will never forget !!!I'm not sure what novel the previous reviewer read but it wasn't Touchwood. Ms. Kallmaker is one of the top writers in the romance genre and this is one of her best (and my personal favorite - so far). I don't have any phobia's with age differences between lovers so that might be a hang up that the reviewer couldn't deal with? The pace of the book is excellent, each action builds on the one prior and the reader feels totally connected to the characters. I highly recommend this book The lead character `Rayann' is totally independent and an original. She stands up for herself and does her best (with success) to be self-sufficient after being left out in the cold (this is the beginning of the book). The character study and prose is so wonderful I would often re-read a page for the sheer enjoyment. I was fully engaged with the two main characters as well as the equally fleshed out supporting characters. I didn't find Rayann overtly lesbian, of course when you are a lesbian you will go to a lesbian bar - lol. Any woman would be more inclined to visit a woman's center rather than the YMCA. As to the comment about `having a problem with men outright' I can tell the reviewer did not finish the novel as there was a wonderful example in the book of a super nice guy. I won't give the plot away but suffice it to say that `love' is the entire premise of the novel. Rayann has eyes for only one woman, and is with only two women in the novel, both whom she cares for in different ways. Perhaps the reviewer also didn't note that the book is told from Rayanne's point of view for a purpose -it is deliberately one-side - I found it utterly charming. from the publisher's web site - Twenty-nine-year-old Rayann Germaine, betrayed by her lover, flees in grief and rage. She meets rare book dealer Louisa Thatcher, a woman many years her senior, who offers shelter and work... and soon, passion, and a loving place in her life. But there are challenges to this new love. But Rayann encounters challenges to this new love - from friends who question its wisdom, from her mother who disapproves of this liaison with a woman her own contemporary, from Louisa's son who learns for the first time his mother's true sexuality. And there are profound differences between Rayann and Louisa themselves, two women who come from dramatically different places in the spectrum of age and life experience. Setting her story in today's ever-changing environs of California's Bay Area, Karin Kallmaker brings her talent to full flower in this entertaining, erotic, thought- provoking exploration of love, and of that landscape of the mind known as age. |
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