
Added on April 8, 2026
In the Kentucky Appalachians of the 1940s, eighteen-year-old Ivy Lee aches for something more than the narrow hollows and sagging porches of The Glens.Bright, beautiful, and largely unseen, she feels like a burden to her weary mother and a stranger to the father she met only once. School comes easily, but its lessons seem useless in a place where most girls grow up only to repeat the lives of the women before them.Ivy dreams of something larger, though she cannot quite name what it is.Then one summer evening the Great Meridian Show, a traveling carnival, rolls into Culpepper.Lanterns flicker along the dusty midway. Music drifts from the carousel. The scent of popcorn and fried dough hangs in the warm mountain air. For a moment the world feels wider than the hills that have always held her in place.And then Ivy notices a crooked sign nailed to a tent post:HELP WANTED — GIRL FOR THE SHOWInside the tent, beneath the glow of lantern light and painted canvas, a polished voice studies her carefully.“What’s your name, honey?”“Ivy Lee, sir,” she whispers.The man smiles slowly.“No,” he says. “I don’t see Ivy Lee. I see much more than that. I see Ivaleena — The Most Beautiful Girl in the World.”Drawn by the glitter of the carnival and the promise of escape, Ivy steps from the quiet shadows of The Glens into a world of sequins, lights, and carefully crafted illusions. But the carnival is a place where appearances are everything, and truth is often hidden behind the painted smile of the show.What begins as a dream of freedom slowly becomes a deeper journey toward self-understanding. Because beauty given by others can just as easily be taken away, and the hardest truth of all may be discovering who she is when the spotlight fades.Tender, atmospheric, and deeply human, Ivaleena is a coming-of-age story about identity, resilience, and the quiet courage it takes to claim one’s own life.Perfect for readers who enjoy the evocative storytelling of Barbara Kingsolver, Lee Smith, and Fannie Flagg, Ivaleena captures the spirit of the Appalachian South with warmth, honesty, and unforgettable characters.
This book resonated with me. I couldn’t put it down and I didn’t want to. With emotion raw and deeply felt, the story pulls you in completely. Brenda K. Thompson’s writing is beautifully engrossing. Her introduction to the world of a traveling carnival in the 40s and how Ivaleena persevered in it was compelling. I felt like I lived every moment of it.LP
WOW… an incredibly well-written book. Each paragraph felt like a living, moving picture. I didn’t just read this story, I felt it. I found myself completely drawn in, not wanting to put it down, and not wanting it to end. There’s something so immersive about Ms. Thompson’s writing that you feel like you’re right there, living it alongside the characters. A truly moving read. Bravo, Ms. Thompson.
This book resonated with me. I couldn’t put it down and I didn’t want to. With emotion raw and deeply felt, the story pulls you in completely. Brenda K. Thompson’s writing is beautifully engrossing. Her introduction to the world of a traveling carnival in the 40s and how Ivaleena persevered in it was compelling. I felt like I lived every moment of it.LP

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