Sunday, June 21, 2020

Goodbye Kate

By Billy C. Clark

Isaac is out exploring the countryside, as boys tend to do, when he encounters an old mule.  Skinny and rough, Kate the mule has been scrounging a living in the Kentucky hills ever since her owner moved and left her behind. But Isaac and Kate immediately become pals and Kate follows him around like a pet dog.
Isaac is a country boy although his father has a shoe repair business in town. But Isaac's parents are not farmers and don't have a barn or stable where Kate can live. His parents sympathize with Isaac's love for his huge new friend but they can't afford to provide a home for the mule and they tell Isaac to find Kate a home somewhere else by wintertime.
But before that needs to happen, Isaac and Kate will have fun, exciting summer together including getting into a bit of trouble. They get caught stealing field corn, Kate takes on a skunk, and she also falls and hurts her leg.
But these minor troubles pale in comparison to the heap of trouble they land in when Isaac heads off to school in the fall and Kate refuses to be left behind.

This was a fun and touching story, kind of a combination of Mulberry RFD and No Time for Sergeants. Set in the 1940s or early 1950s, and copyrighted 1964, it is a trip to a time and place many would like to experience.


Wednesday, June 17, 2020

The Sister

By Poppy Adams

Ginny has lived alone for years in the falling- down mansion that used to be the biggest, best house in the area. But those days and the money that enabled them are gone for good. An old woman and crippled with arthritis, Ginny has shut most of the house up and sold off its contents. She lives alone.
It wasn't always like that, of course. She had a mother, a father and a younger sister.  The parents are deceased and the sister, Vivi, left decades ago. But now Vivi has sent Ginny a letter informing her that she is moving back home. Why, after decades of estrangement, Vivi is returning home, she doesn't say.
At first Ginny is thrilled her beloved little sister is coming home. But once Vivi is actually home, Ginny finds her presence too disruptive, too unsettling. And when Vivi starts to rehash old history, laying down a few home truths that Ginny refused to or was unable to see, it is intolerable for Ginny.
Ginny obviously has some kind of mental limitation, though precisely what it is isn't explained. Once the sisters are reunited it quickly becomes clear that they view their history together from completely different perspectives. It also becomes clear that no one in Ginny's life, not her parents, not her sister, not her doctor, not her teachers ever told her about her mental limitations. Ginny isn't stupid and she long ago figured out she was different. But she was never given a explanation as to why or any real help coping with it. So when Vivi pushes her way into Ginny's cocoon of solitude, it really upsets Ginny's precarious mental balance.

This was a rather slow story. I skipped over several paragraphs, especially the mothier parts (moths are an interest Ginny shared with her father).  Although it is usually interesting reading about dysfunctional families,  I didn't enjoy the mystery of what exactly Ginny's problem was, which is never made clear to the reader or even to Ginny. At one point, Vivi explains exactly what it is, but Ginny refuses to hear her and, since the story is told from only Ginny's perspective, the reader doesn't get to hear it either. Any way, the ending was pretty predictable. No real surprises there.

Published in the United Kingdom as The Behaviour of Moths.

Review by Publishers Weekly.

Sunday, June 14, 2020

Audrey Hepburn's Neck

By Alan Brown

Toshi was just a kid when his parents split up. The separation was amicable and Toshi got to spend time with both his parents. But he was never told why they separated.
Now a young man on his own, Toshi has moved away from the small Japanese fishing village where he grew up. He has a promising career, friends and lovers. But he still wonders about the silence between his parents that dominated his childhood. Why did his mother leave? Why is his father so sad? It isn't until his father has passed away that Toshi's mom reveals the shocking truth of their past.

I really enjoyed this story. As a boy, Toshi saw an Audrey Hepburn movie and was smitten by the beautiful actress. It inspired him to learn more about Westerners and to learn English. After he moves to Tokyo, he makes friends with several Americans, one of whom becomes his best friend after failing to seduce Toshi. But underneath it all, is the puzzle of his parents' failed marriage.

Review by Publishers Weekly.


Thursday, June 11, 2020

The Dewey Decimal System of Love

By Josephine Carr

Alison Sheffield is a forty year old librarian and a near virgin. The last time she had an intimate relationship was in her twenties. But she likes her life, her job, her apartment, her friends. She is content. That is until she saw Aleksi Kullio. Handsome, talented Aleksi is the new symphony conductor and Alison is smitten. Problem is, Aleksi is married and his wife is beautiful, blonde, sexy: the very image of a trophy wife. How can a mousy, quiet, near-sighted, modest near-virgin librarian possibly compete with that?

This was fun read. For a mousy librarian, Alison has a lot going on in her life. Problems at work, volunteering at the concert hall (to get closer to Aleksi), strained relationships with both her father and mother. And a valuable document that has disappeared with the suspicion falling on Alison.

Review by Kirkus Reviews.