Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

The Fallen Fruit

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Combining history and fantasy, a sweeping multi-generational epic in the vein of Kindred and The Time Traveler's Wife about a woman who travels through time to end a family curse that has plagued her ancestors for generations.

On a rainy day in May 1964, history professor Cecily Bridge-Davis begins to search for the sixty-five acres of land she inherited from her father's family. The quest leads her to uncover a dark secret: In every generation, one offspring from each Bridge family unit vanishes—and is mysteriously whisked back in time. Rules have been established that must be followed to prevent dire consequences:

Never interfere with past events.

Always carry your free Negro papers.

Search for the survival family packs in the orchard and surrounding forest. The ribbon on the pack designates the decade the pack was made to orient you in time.

Do not speak to strangers unless absolutely necessary.

With only a family Bible and a map marked with the locations of mysterious containers to aid her, Cecily heads to the library, hoping to discover the truth of how this curse began, and how it might be ended. As she moves through time, she encounters a circle of ancestors, including Sabrina Humbles, a free Black woman who must find the courage to seize an opportunity—or lose her heart; Luke Bridge, who traverses battlefields, slavery, and time itself to reunite with his family; Rebecca Bridge, a mother tested by an ominous threat; and Amelia Bridge, a young woman burdened with survivor's guilt who will face the challenge of a lifetime—and change Cecily's life forever. It is a race through time and against the clock to find the answers that will free her family forever.

Shawntelle Madison's historical fiction debut is an enthralling, page-turning family saga about the inevitability of fate, the invincibility of love, and the indelible bonds of family.


  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2024

      Madison turns from paranormal romance to a story about a family cursed to travel through time. While searching for land she inherited, history professor Cecily discovers that in every generation one member from her family vanishes back in time, setting her on a quest for answers about how this curse began--and how to end it. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 29, 2024
      Madison (the Flea Market Magic Mystery series) chronicles a professor’s efforts to break her family’s curse in this ambitious time travel narrative. In 1968, Black history professor Cecily Bridge-Davis inherits 65 acres of land in Virginia from her father’s family. She plans to sell, but while searching the property, she stumbles upon a family Bible, within which are the records of a long-held secret: in each generation of the Bridge family, one member mysteriously vanishes, transported to the past. Driven to uncover the truth and understand the implications of this curse, Cecily launches an investigation that brings her into contact with her own ancestors. Among them is Luke, the first Bridge to fall through time. From him, Cecily learns that a single change in the past could impact the future. Armed with this knowledge, Cecily meets Luke’s mother and tries to convince her to make different decisions and so alter their futures, breaking the curse. An abrupt ending and some wonky pacing disappoint, but Madison expertly navigates the time jumps, weaving together a robust shared history for the Bridge family. Fans of complex historical speculative fiction will be pleased. Agent: Jim McCarthy, Dystel, Goderich & Bourret.

    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2024
      An intriguing hybrid of historical romance and fantasy suggests that going back in time may be one way to weed out generational trauma. "My family tree has poisoned roots," Cecily Bridge-Davis announces at the start of this haunting saga about the "curse" of time travel. It is May 1964 and Cecily, an African American professor of history, has come into possession of her father's 65-acre patch of Virginia farmland. When she leaves her Tennessee home to see what's there, she finds an empty cabin, a spool made from a maple tree, and a family Bible with a yellowed flyleaf listing the names and birth dates of every Bridge family member born on the farm from the 1760s to the 1920s. She also hears from an elderly local about a long-ago murder-kidnapping implicating one of her ancestors. Which turns out to be slightly less shocking than discovering the reason why some of those ancestors vanished for decades: One Bridge offspring in each generation is somehow transported back in time. She also finds a map with locations of strange containers along with a list of "Bridge Family Rules" for time travel: "Never interfere with past events." "Always carry your freedom papers." "Search for the survival packs in the orchard." "Do not speak to strangers unless absolutely necessary." Cecily presses her inquiry into the family's temporally peripatetic history all the way back to the 18th century and such precursors as Luke, whose tumble through time takes him from freedom to slavery and eventually into the Continental Army, where he undergoes the travails of Valley Forge. After her forays in the library for more information, Cecily herself is compelled to leave 1964 for 1911, where she takes a different identity and eventually gets a teaching job in circa 1924 Washington, D.C., where she tells one of her students, a young woman named Amelia Bridge, that they're related and that "Millie" must make the most important time jaunt of their shared family history. Sometimes all this gets even more complicated than it reads here. But Madison shows considerable skill and narrative control. To her credit, it's hard not to be reminded of Octavia Butler'sKindred, as well asThe Time Traveler's Wife and some of Ray Bradbury's time-displacement stories. A crafty, page-turning spin on chronicling Black family history.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      August 1, 2024
      Family secrets abound as Cecily explores her unexpected inheritance. While she's been estranged from her father's family, the death of the aunt who raised her reveals that 65 acres in Virginia are waiting for her. But the mind-boggling discovery she makes is that her family is gifted--or cursed--with an inherited ability to fall through time. Enough family members have done so that there are rules written out and buried caches of supplies for those caught unprepared. Cecily must decide whether to break one of the cardinal rules and change a past event in order to save her family. Madison (A Dream's Last Embers, 2023) weaves in details from her own history and the real Free State to ground the more fabulous elements and give this world a fascinating depth. Cecily's journey will interest those who enjoyed the time traveling of Octavia Butler's masterpiece, Kindred. The family mystery, the generations spanned, and the misfortunes Cecily learns about will also appeal to fans of intricate, multigenerational tales like Gabriel Garc�a M�rquez's classic One Hundred Years of Solitude.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Loading