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Cold Sassy Tree

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Plot Summary

Cold Sassy Tree

Olive Ann Burns

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 1984

Plot Summary

Set in a small Georgia town in 1906, Olive Ann Burns’s historical novel Cold Sassy Tree (1984) explores the social mores and taboos of the time through the eyes of its fourteen-year-old narrator.

Eight years ago, in 1906, Will Tweedy’s grandfather, Enoch, arrived at Will’s mother Mary’s house in Cold Sassy, Georgia, a few weeks after the death of his wife, Will’s grandmother. Enoch sends Will to fetch his mother and his Aunt Loma for an announcement. Enoch shocks everyone by announcing that he is getting married to Miss Love Simpson, a much younger woman who has been working at his store. Loma and Mary, Will’s mother, are scandalized, worrying how the rest of the small town will react, but Will supports the decision, at least privately. He has a crush on the pretty Miss Love, and he also thinks his grandfather has been depressed since Granny’s death and needs someone to look after him.

Enoch ignores the criticism and plans to elope with Miss Love. On the day of the elopement, Will sneaks away to go fishing, despite his mother’s insistence that the family observes a lengthy mourning period for his grandmother as is proper. Will walks along a narrow train trestle, but when he is halfway over a train comes speeding down the tracks, too fast for Will to avoid. In a panic, he lies down in-between the tracks and the train roars over him, just barely missing him. A girl named Lightfoot McLendon helps him off the trestle while the train passengers debark and cheer for his survival.
When Will returns to town, he has become famous for his near-death experience. At his house, the townsfolk start to arrive to hear the story and see for themselves. When Enoch and Miss Love arrive, everyone is embarrassed and shocked at this shameless display.



The town gives Enoch and Miss Love the cold shoulder over the marriage. However, Will begins spending time at his grandfather’s house, becoming friendly with Miss Love. His crush becomes even more pronounced and he begins to spy on her in secret, infatuated. This leads him to discover that Enoch and Miss Love are not sleeping together, but have separate bedrooms. When he asks Miss Love about this, she confesses that it isn’t a real marriage: Enoch, wishing to have company and a housekeeper, offered to put Miss Love in his will if she married him and kept house for him.
Shortly after this confession, Miss Love’s former fiancé, Clayton McCallister arrives from Texas, sparking more gossip. Will sees him appealing to Miss Love to come back to Texas with him, kissing her passionately. Miss Love allows the kiss, but then tells him to go home without her.

Returning from a trip with some friends to pick up a horse, Will finds that Enoch has purchased tickets for his father, Hoyt, to go to New York City to purchase goods for the store; the two men are trying to convince Will’s mother to take a trip with her husband. However, still mourning her mother, Mary is reluctant to go. After Will urges her to go, she changes her mind, convinced that the trip would do her good. She is excited about the trip.

Enoch changes his mind: he will go to New York himself, taking Miss Love with him. Mary, angry and disappointed, focuses her ire on Miss Love. When Enoch and Miss Love leave, Hoyt tries to take the sting out of it by purchasing the first automobile owned in Cold Sassy.



When Enoch and Miss Love return from their trip, they are affectionate, and Will wonders if the marriage is now a real one. Enoch reveals he has also purchased a car and has plans to open a car dealership.

Will enjoys driving his parents’ car, and asks Lightfoot McLendon, out on a date. He drives her out to the cemetery and kisses her. Some of the townsfolk see this and tell Will’s parents, who punish him by taking away his driving privilege. Will asks Enoch if he can drive his car instead, and in exchange, he drives Enoch and Miss Love out to the country and gives them both driving lessons. Driving home, Will crashes the car, and they are forced to sleep over with a kindly family. Will overhears Miss Love and Enoch talking; Enoch wishes the marriage to become a real relationship, but Miss Love tells him she has a terrible secret she believes will change his feelings towards her: She was sexually assaulted by her own father when she was a child. Enoch, however, tells her this doesn’t matter to him; he still loves her.

Back at home, Will can see that Enoch and Miss Love are truly in love with each other. Will’s uncle Camp commits suicide, and Enoch hires Hosie Roach, a boy Will considers to be his rival. Hosie now has money and begins courting Lightfoot, much to Will’s sadness. Enoch is assaulted and robbed, and while recovering from his injuries, sickens with pneumonia and lays dying. Miss Love reveals to Will that she is pregnant with Enoch’s child.



Enoch passes away. Reflecting on the fact that his family will never accept Miss Love, Will sees his grandfather’s faith in God as a lesson on how to live his own life.

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