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Expect to be confused when you begin Heidi Julavits’ imaginative second novel, The Effect of Living Backwards. Even the author warns of the challenges ahead for readers. On the frontispiece, she quotes a passage from Lewis Carroll’s Through the Looking Glass in which the Queen tells Alice that “the effect of living backwards. . . always makes one a little giddy at first.” Like Julavits’ narrator, you will find yourself wondering what is appearance and what is reality.

Julavits looks to both the present and future in The Effect Living Backwards. The plot revolves around two sisters, good girl Alice and slutty Edith, who are flying from Casablanca to Melilla when hijackers take over their Moroccan Airlines flight.

The comic back-and-forth between the fiercely competitive sisters keeps the story interesting, since each feels a need to show her particular power. With Edith, it’s sexual; with Alice, it’s a kind of social-worker goodness and dependability. How well the sisters know each other’s weak spots shows up in the way they aim their shots. “It seems as if you’ve lost your spark,” Alice says sweetly to Edith. Momentarily, the soon-to-be-married sister is seducing the flight steward and soliciting bets on how long he will last, sexually.

This often outrageous book alternates between chapters narrated by Alice detailing the sometimes tedious events of the terrorist hijacking, and chapters comprised of highly inventive “shame stories,” in which individuals, either on the hijacked plane or closely connected to them, tell how they came to be who they are. Bordering on absurdity, these shame stories together create an appealing and sometimes hilarious black comedy.

The prologue, which is set at a time after the hijacking, finds Alice interviewing to attend the International Institute for Terrorist Studies in Lucerne and having even her simplest beliefs about who she is brought into question. “What if your childhood was all a big misunderstanding?” the professor asks her. And, of her recollections: “How can you be so certain?” By the epilogue, certainty is left behind, but the future is not without hope.

Expect to be confused when you begin Heidi Julavits' imaginative second novel, The Effect of Living Backwards. Even the author warns of the challenges ahead for readers. On the frontispiece, she quotes a passage from Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking Glass in which the Queen…
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<B>War’s hidden costs</B> Tim Gautreaux’s mesmerizing second novel opens with a family searching for one of its own in the years following WWI. Byron Aldridge was preordained to take over the family’s mills until he comes back from France "with the haunted expression of a poisoned dog" and no interest in returning to Pittsburgh. In 1923, his father dispatches Byron’s younger brother Randolph to the remote mill in western Louisiana where Byron has landed as constable to "bring him back to us," both literally and emotionally. Paradoxically called "Nimbus," the mill is home to 500 workers, black and white, living in separate quarters and drinking on opposite sides of the saloon men rough enough to survive, Randolph writes home, this "waterlogged, weather-tortured, weed wracked" place. Felling and sawing and spitting out planks from a huge tract of cypress is but a small part of what the brothers do for the next five years. Violence is an everyday occurrence, and revenge is always swift to follow. Shortly after Randolph’s arrival, Byron kills a man while breaking up a fight, and Randolph wonders at his brother’s calm demeanor. Did he inherit the ability to kill a man "as if he were a fly biting an ear?" Or were his war memories, still unshared, responsible for encasing him inside a seemingly impenetrable shell? The old marshal from nearby Tiger Island, the setting of Gautreaux’s first novel, sees in Byron the same look he saw in the faces of roving gangs after the Civil War, men consumed by hate which they passed on to their progeny "like crooked teeth and club feet." The horror of war and its effect on the human psyche lies at the core of the novel; as the marshal succinctly tells Randolph, Byron "just got ruint in France." In poetic prose Gautreaux brings to gritty life this backwater microcosm of war’s aftermath and its diverse inhabitants, all in search of salvation in the swamp they call home. Like the thick fog which nightly descends on the mill, the mounting tension envelopes the reader, who senses that Armageddon is fast approaching this desolate stretch of bayou.

<B>War's hidden costs</B> Tim Gautreaux's mesmerizing second novel opens with a family searching for one of its own in the years following WWI. Byron Aldridge was preordained to take over the family's mills until he comes back from France "with the haunted expression of a…

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Author of the critically acclaimed short story collection Half in Love, Maile Meloy now tries her hand at writing a complex multi-generational novel. Liars and Saints has the lively feel of a Catholic soap opera in fast-forward, following the Santerre family through four generations of tangled secrets and deceptions. Yvette Santerre, the family’s matriarch, keeps many truths hidden from her family with the best intentions, starting, most notably, by claiming her teenage daughter’s son Jamie as her own child. Even Teddy, Yvette’s husband, is kept in the dark, as the oldest daughter Margot goes to France for a year ostensibly, to study abroad while Yvette goes to a convent "to rest" during the course of her supposed pregnancy. But as Jamie grows older, Teddy struggles to connect with his unplanned "son"; Margot marries and tries, unsuccessfully, to have another child; and Jamie’s other "sister," Clarissa, suffers from a decaying marriage. As Yvette’s children and grandchildren mature, and a shocking relationship develops, the family must begin to unravel its own chain of lies.

Rather than having the narrative follow a linear chronology, Meloy jumps in time, with each chapter focusing on the perspective of a different character. This shifting viewpoint makes it difficult for readers to invest much in any one of the characters particularly given the fact that the novel covers more than 50 years in the life of this family over the course of a mere 272 pages. At the same time, this quality, along with the high drama that builds and unfolds, makes Liars and Saints

Meloy’s writing is smooth and often vivid, and she manages to surprise readers, and thus avoid predictability, with an ever-spiraling tale of tragedy, faith and the intersection between the two.

Jenn McKee is a writer in Berkley, Michigan.

 

Author of the critically acclaimed short story collection Half in Love, Maile Meloy now tries her hand at writing a complex multi-generational novel. Liars and Saints has the lively feel of a Catholic soap opera in fast-forward, following the Santerre family through four generations of…

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In Kevin Brockmeier’s first novel, The Truth About Celia, the author uses a mixed palette of genres to paint a world where "there are worse things than being dead." In the guise of his central figure, science-fiction writer Christopher Brooks, Brockmeier intelligently and heartbreakingly weaves together a series of stories that search for the truth about the missing Celia.

While playing one day in her backyard with her father busy giving a tour of their historic house, and her mother, Janet, off at an orchestra rehearsal seven-year-old Celia disappears. One minute she is tightrope-walking along an ancient stone wall, and the next, she is mysteriously gone. A police investigation ensues, and all the right people are questioned, but nothing not a shred of evidence turns up. Out of desperation, Christopher Brooks turns to his writing to console himself, and at the same time, explore the many repercussions of Celia’s disappearance. What he creates or rather what Brockmeier creates is truly magical. The stories that make up The Truth About Celia track not just the search for what happened to the missing child, but the reactions of those involved in Celia’s life. Brockmeier’s prose hauntingly ventures beyond the mundane and into places that only a grieving mind can go. With beautiful attention to detail ("the water trickled into the cup in two thin strands that joined and spindled about each other") and clear respect for language, Brockmeier has penned an extraordinary first novel. Delving into the toll of grief and pain, he exposes the truths that lie behind life’s sometimes horrible realities.

T.A. Grasso lives in Hoboken, New Jersey.

 

In Kevin Brockmeier's first novel, The Truth About Celia, the author uses a mixed palette of genres to paint a world where "there are worse things than being dead." In the guise of his central figure, science-fiction writer Christopher Brooks, Brockmeier intelligently and heartbreakingly weaves…

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The reader meets quirky Chrysalis Moffat, narrator of Sandra Newman’s enigmatic and rewarding first novel, as she awaits her adoptive mother’s funeral. Chrysa was adopted in 1971 when John Moffat, a biochemist working for the CIA in Guatemala, rescued her after the death of her parents. This bare bones information is meted out by the author in crisp chapters, composed in list form, which jump erratically back and forth in time. Gradually Newman fills in the gaps in Chrysa’s story, like a painstakingly assembled jigsaw puzzle.

Chrysa’s older brother Eddie returns to California for their mother’s burial with his guru Ralph in tow. They decide to turn the mansion Eddie has inherited into the Tibetan School of Miracles and for five months Eddie, Ralph and Chrysa get "college-educated adults to believe chanting made them into good people," thanks to Ralph’s prowess at spontaneously spouting "words to live by." Mysteriously Ralph then cracks up, and Eddie leaves to travel and play blackjack with his friend Denise.

In addition to making abrupt time shifts, Newman ties her characters together with fragile threads of coincidence. When Eddie first meets Denise, she inexplicably has a picture of his father, John Moffat, in her briefcase; we find out later that the two were professional blackjack players (a former profession of the author herself). Denise and Ralph share the same father, but have different mothers, and Ralph doesn’t realize Eddie knows Denise until he finds her picture in Eddie’s suitcase.

While the reader is struggling to keep the dizzying relationships straight, Newman, who was herself adopted and met her biological parents for the first time when she was 25, is focused on how parental love or the lack thereof affects her characters’ ability to survive.

Readers who enjoy a bit of a challenge will savor Newman’s tale of a young woman’s identity search and look forward to her next endeavor to see if she retains her unique and inventive style.

Deborah Donovan is a writer and former librarian in Cincinnati, Ohio.

 

The reader meets quirky Chrysalis Moffat, narrator of Sandra Newman's enigmatic and rewarding first novel, as she awaits her adoptive mother's funeral. Chrysa was adopted in 1971 when John Moffat, a biochemist working for the CIA in Guatemala, rescued her after the death of her…

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When Approximately Heaven opens on an ordinary Saturday morning in a small Tennessee town, protagonist Don Brush describes himself as "unemployed and not especially ambitious to improve, and really not mindful of anything in the world" other than the tomato he is about to slice. Without fight or fanfare, his wife, Mary, abruptly announces that she’s leaving him she has an appointment to see a divorce lawyer on Monday. This turn of events slowly spurs Don to action, though not the logical, thought-out kind of action such life-altering words might produce in a more practical sort. His first movements are reactionary: he begins cleaning up, doing chores he has put off for weeks in the hope that this sudden spurt of "things getting done" will change her mind. Mary’s mind is made up however; Don’s efforts are too little too late, and she still intends to leave. Don soon decides on a novel response he will leave first. He takes off "as is," with just the clothes on his back, guided by the muddled notion that his wife will be compelled to stay if he’s not there, because otherwise, who would feed the pets? What follows is a circuitous roadtrip home, doused at every turn with a liberal quantity of low-budget beer.

In this impressive debut novel, Whorton exhibits a dead-on ear for dialogue. The blue collar, work-hard-for-every-dollar Tennesseans he portrays with gentle humor are endearing even when they’re behaving in politically incorrect and less-than-reasonable fashion.

Don’s meandering trip eventually includes an ornery travel buddy who has a hidden agenda for retribution, (and a hidden gun); a dubious mission to deliver an un-stolen sofa; a tour of Mississippi’s casinos and beaches; and a chance meeting with a free-to-do-as-she-pleases, attractive woman. It doesn’t seem like a good formula for warming a wife’s disillusioned heart and fostering a romantic reunion, but there is power in procrastination. As Don explains it: "Sometimes when you’re at a moment of crisis, the best thing you can do is become absent." This laid-back journey can be infuriating in its lack of direction, but it’s a drive worth taking. The trip offers Don the opportunity for self-analysis, and traveling with him gives readers a chance to discover what wisdom there may be in simply waiting.

 

When Approximately Heaven opens on an ordinary Saturday morning in a small Tennessee town, protagonist Don Brush describes himself as "unemployed and not especially ambitious to improve, and really not mindful of anything in the world" other than the tomato he is about to slice.…

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People are already making comparisons between A Year in Provence and Manana, Manana. But, at the risk of committing travel writing heresy, some readers may like Manana better. It’s often funnier, grittier and more textured than Mayle’s best-selling book.

Scottish sheep farmers Ellie and Peter Kerr decide to risk their financial future on a citrus orchard in Mallorca, a beautiful resort island off the coast of Spain. Peter Kerr paints a precise and compelling portrait of his adopted home, from the postman’s morning cognac to the row of olive trees on the hillside, to the family fishing boats dwarfed by the yachts of affluent expats. With a few judiciously chosen details, he captures the Mallorcan landscape and character. Kerr’s reports on the specialties of Mallorcan cuisine will make your mouth water. But his greatest achievement may be his ability to convey the quirks and nobility of his neighbors. A hilarious scene involves a neighbor dubbed "Se–ora Breadteeth." She shows up at the Kerr’s farm one day with her niece and tries to get the Kerrs to hire the girl as a housemaid. She also offers them her sturdy nephews as farm hands. The Kerrs have some trouble convincing Breadteeth that they are not wealthy just because they are foreign, that they are used to doing their own farm work, and that they can’t afford to do it any other way. At last, Breadteeth sighs with comprehension and says, "So you’re really just peasants, too?"

It’s the fact that the Kerrs do have to make their own living off the land that truly connects them to the Mallorcan community. They experience the same risks and fears as their neighbors, which takes them deeper into rural Spain than most travel writers and rich vacationers will ever go.

 

People are already making comparisons between A Year in Provence and Manana, Manana. But, at the risk of committing travel writing heresy, some readers may like Manana better. It's often funnier, grittier and more textured than Mayle's best-selling book.

Scottish sheep farmers…

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Thrillers often explore espionage and intrigue from the inside, but Janette Turner Hospital’s new novel Due Preparations for the Plague plunges the reader into the shadowy world of terrorism and intelligence from an outsider’s perspective. The result is a mesmerizing tale of grief, mystery and revelation.

Due Preparations
opens as Lowell, a house painter, tries to cope with the approaching anniversary of his mother’s death in a skyjacking. As the date nears, the reader sympathizes with Lowell’s grief and anxiety. Already troubled by anger and guilt, Lowell is further shaken by unwanted phone calls from Samantha, who was among a group of children released from the doomed flight. Now a member of a support group for survivors of the incident, she pesters Lowell for any information he might have. Lowell’s troubles expand when his estranged father, a former intelligence agent, is killed in a traffic accident. Information he leaves his son sets Lowell and Samantha on the path to learning more about the tragedy that marked both their lives. An intense, riveting reading experience follows that explores the overlapping worlds of national security and international terrorism.

As civilians and proxies for the reader Lowell and Samantha have a tinge of the sinister about them. But Hospital skillfully imparts in them the idealism that drives many to enter the nation’s intelligence services, as well as the isolation and loneliness that are the toll of a lifetime in clandestine activity.

Gregory Harris is a writer and editor living in Indianapolis.

 

Thrillers often explore espionage and intrigue from the inside, but Janette Turner Hospital's new novel Due Preparations for the Plague plunges the reader into the shadowy world of terrorism and intelligence from an outsider's perspective. The result is a mesmerizing tale of grief, mystery and…

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Of course, we remember the Big Things: the first kiss, the first real love, the first job, the first child. But we also measure our lives through our recollection of smaller pleasures: that sunrise service on the beach; the sleek dress that made you feel like a grown-up for the first time; that perfect meal in that perfect trattoria in Rome.

Author Hilary Liftin’s smaller pleasures almost always involve refined sugar. She measures her young life in candy corn, peanut butter cups and conversation hearts. Candy and Me: A Love Story is her bon-bon of a book about growing up with a sweet tooth. Liftin has had an ordinary enough life suburban girlhood, good college, a series of slightly tiresome boyfriends and jobs before finding the right one of each. But her psychic world is truly Candyland. As a child, she bonds with her brother while she eats confectioners sugar from a Dixie cup. She has her first serious romance during a summer that she’s fixated on Junior Mints. In the process of dumping her, a later boyfriend tries to placate her with Bottle Caps a particularly cruel gesture, because they’re her favorite candy.

Along the way, she educates us about the great universe of candy production. Did you know that fudge was invented when someone made an error making another candy? That Necco manufactures more than 8 billion conversation hearts during the Valentine season? I didn’t, but I do now. Liftin writes with the light charm and humor appropriate to her topic. Life may be difficult, but candy is always pretty dandy. And whatever your craving, growing up is about learning to balance the sweet and the sour.

Anne Bartlett is a journalist in South Florida.

 

Of course, we remember the Big Things: the first kiss, the first real love, the first job, the first child. But we also measure our lives through our recollection of smaller pleasures: that sunrise service on the beach; the sleek dress that made you feel…

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In The Mercury 13, journalist and Mount Holyoke College professor Martha Ackmann serves up a fascinating account of the efforts by women to become astronauts in the early days of the U.S. space program. With NASA and other government officials firmly ensconced in the good ol’ boys club, there was never any doubt that the trainees for the initial Mercury space-flight missions would be exclusively men. Yet, as Ackmann shows, a staunch and able group of females, led by ace test pilot Jerrie Cobb, underwent the same physical and mental testing as later heroes Alan B. Shepard and John Glenn and might well have been excellent astronauts. Truth to tell, there were certain physical characteristics—for example, lower body weight—that led NASA executives Dr. Randy Lovelace and Air Force Brigadier General Donald Flickinger to believe that females might offer some advantages over their male counterparts.

Eventually, 13 women emerged as frontline candidates for Mercury missions. On a wing and a prayer, they soldiered on, hoping that NASA’s powerful all-male hierarchy would see their value to the program. But Vice President Lyndon Johnson, then the titular head of NASA, nipped these dreams in the bud. Not even a series of congressional hearings on the topic could sway the men in power. Ackmann provides interesting details on the lives of the would-be female astronauts and their battle to win a chance at making history. Besides being an excellent volume in the category of women’s studies, The Mercury 13 also serves to fill a critical gap in the history of NASA and (wo)manned space flight. A foreword is provided by ABC News correspondent Lynn Sherr, who was a semi-finalist in the now-defunct journalist-in-space competition.

In The Mercury 13, journalist and Mount Holyoke College professor Martha Ackmann serves up a fascinating account of the efforts by women to become astronauts in the early days of the U.S. space program. With NASA and other government officials firmly ensconced in the good…

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Adriana Trigiani’s enchanting new novel will find a warm welcome from every reader who has encountered a fork in the road to love and taken the more perilous path.

Lucia Sartori is a dynamic young Italian-American woman living in Greenwich Village in the early 1950s. She loves her close-knit family, her church and her job as apprentice to a designer on the fast track at B. Altman’s department store. For Lucia, her work as a seamstress is more than a job: it’s her passion.

Lucia is engaged to Dante DeMartino, a devoted, if unexciting, young man who bears a strong resemblance to her favorite movie star, Don Ameche. She has overlooked many of Dante’s faults until she is challenged one night by Dante’s old-fashioned, controlling mother, who insists that her prospective daughter-in-law give up her beloved career as a seamstress and stay at home after the wedding. Shouldn’t her life revolve around her new husband? Isn’t this the existence every Italian girl aspires to? For Lucia, the answer is a resounding "No, never!" She ends the engagement and sees her life take an irrevocable turn with the arrival of the mysterious, devastatingly attractive John Talbot. The shift from a secure, surefooted lifestyle to one in which Lucia must constantly cope with shifting sands heralds the beginning of a journey that ultimately reveals what will truly bring her happiness.

Trigiani, a television writer who first came to the attention of readers with her popular Big Stone Gap series, has created in Lucia a strong-willed, yet vulnerable heroine whose innocence, determination and optimism charm everyone who crosses her path. While the story ostensibly focuses on Lucia’s romantic hijinks, it is, even more, a testament to the power of familial love and friendship. Readers may find the decidedly wholesome backdrop to the story surprising (remember, we’re back in the 1950s). Perhaps that is Trigiani’s greatest gift to her reader: the recognition that devotion, loyalty and forgiveness will ultimately win the day.

Claire Gerus writes from Norwich, Connecticut.

 

Adriana Trigiani's enchanting new novel will find a warm welcome from every reader who has encountered a fork in the road to love and taken the more perilous path.

Lucia Sartori is a dynamic young Italian-American woman living in Greenwich Village in…

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Dorothea Benton Frank focuses on the funny side of life As a young girl growing up on remote Sullivan’s Island in the South Carolina Lowcountry, Dorothea Benton Frank’s lifeline to the world came in the unlikely guise of a clattering old bookmobile.

Impatient by nature, Dot Frank wasn’t much of a student, but she was a voracious reader. When that mobile library pulled up in front of her mother’s house, she would run to check out her three-book limit, read them all in one day, then fuss and stew until the old clunker returned two weeks later.

Frank’s considerable kinetic energy, if not her study habits, eventually carried her through the Fashion Institute of America in Atlanta and into a globetrotting career as a fashion buyer and representative. She lived in San Francisco, traveled frequently to Europe and Asia, and worked for a decade on Seventh Avenue in New York’s Garment District.

She wasn’t writing a novel, she was living one.

But when her mother died in 1993, Frank was devastated.

“There wasn’t any real way for me to deal with my grief because I was in New Jersey without any family members,” she recalls by phone from her home in Montclair, New Jersey. “My sister and brother live in South Carolina and two of my other brothers live in Texas and Boston. So I began writing to try to put all my feelings down on paper.” A friend stopped over, inquired about the growing monolith of typed pages next to Frank’s word processor, and encouraged her to take a creative writing course at nearby Bloomfield College. Before long, the Lowcountry had a new literary phenom, a Pat Conroy-lite, a princess of tides.

Frank can’t quite believe her good fortune as she prepares to plunge into hardbound fiction with her third novel, Isle of Palms, after hitting the New York Times bestseller list with her first two paperbacks, Sullivan’s Island (2000) and Plantation (2001).

“I’m terrified!” she gasps. “It’s pretty safe when you’re just writing mass market paperbacks, but when you go into hardcovers, you get reviewed. Oh my God, please don’t review me! Because you know it’s not going to be good. I hope I’m dead for a thousand years before [Times critic] Michiko Kakutani knows that I ever drew a breath. Did you ever read her reviews? Oh, God help me!” Frank’s apprehension is understandable. Lowcountry literature, even in the hands of a Conroy or Anne Rivers Siddons, has always fared better with readers than critics, who tend to dismiss it, justly or not, as melodramatic and maudlin. Isle of Palms (the real one is situated just across a causeway from Sullivan’s Island) concerns the midlife flowering of Anna Lutz Abbot, an independent-minded salon owner who has learned how to hold her tongue over a teasing comb to keep her clientele coming back. When she was 10, Anna lost her mother. Her domineering grandmother forced Anna’s father, Douglas, to sell their beloved family home on Isle of Palms and move to Charleston. Come summer, after years of living with her father, Anna is finally ready to return to Isle of Palms and open her own salon.

But the island holds plenty of housewarming surprises for Anna: her daughter Emily returns from college as a rebellious, tattooed teen; her new best friend Lucy begins dating Douglas; her gay ex-husband Jim has outrageous plans for the salon, and her new main squeeze Arthur (a Yankee!) has commitment phobia. Overseeing all the comings and goings in true Southern neighborly fashion are Miss Angel and Miss Mavis, “ladies of a certain age” whose running commentary on Anna’s life rings hilariously true.

Beneath the Fannie Flagg-style jocularity and small-town anecdotes lies a more serious subject: loneliness. This unlikely cast of characters forms an ad hoc family to fill the void left by less-than-perfect biological ones.

“There are a lot of divorced people who also need a way to connect: a Sunday dinner they can count on or, when they get sick, somebody to be at their side, or when they’re worried about something they have someone to call. There are a lot of people who don’t have anyone,” says Frank.

“I get e-mail from people who say, I read seven or eight books a week,’ and I think, my God, what’s going on with your life? I think we have become a society of people who are never going to live up to that mythology of families and children and everybody staying in the same place and going to Grandmama’s on Sunday. That’s just not how life is anymore and so people have had to make changes. This book sort of tells them that this is OK.” Frank’s life has eerie parallels to that of her friend and neighbor Conroy: they both hail from large Irish Catholic families, suffered intense personal traumas growing up (Conroy’s father was The Great Santini; Frank’s died in front of her eyes of a heart attack when she was 4) and have ties to the Citadel (Conroy and her father’s alma mater). Coincidentally, they even own matching pairs of Cavalier King Charles spaniels.

“I’m sort of like his evil sister,” she chuckles. “Switched at birth or something.” But unlike Conroy, who overtly battles his innermost demons in his work, Frank intentionally keeps things light for those who want to visit the Lowcountry without tears.

“I understand that my first job as a writer is to entertain. You have to write a story that people are going to want to keep turning the pages,” she says. “If you look deeper, there are other themes in Isle of Palms. If I’ve entertained you, I’ve done a good job. If I’ve entertained you and given you something to talk about with somebody else, I’ve done a better job. If I’ve entertained you and given you something to talk about, and at the end of the day you have changed yourself a little bit, I’ve done a very good job.” Jay MacDonald lives and writes in Mississippi.

Dorothea Benton Frank focuses on the funny side of life As a young girl growing up on remote Sullivan's Island in the South Carolina Lowcountry, Dorothea Benton Frank's lifeline to the world came in the unlikely guise of a clattering old bookmobile.

Impatient…
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Your kids have heard it all before: "When I was your age. . . ." Parents who use that phrase usually get the sigh and the eye roll, followed shortly by the glaze. Don’t take it personally chances are it’s not the message that’s boring them, it’s the messenger. (Well, maybe you should take it personally!) The point is, while your experiences are certainly relevant to your children’s lives, the value of those experiences sometimes gets lost when you try too hard to draw parallels. Author Chris Crutcher understands this, which is why his latest book, King of the Mild Frontier: An Ill-Advised Autobiography, succeeds on two levels. First, it will bring back a flood of memories for anyone who ever shot a BB gun, played backyard sports or rode a stick pony. But these cultural aspects are secondary to his honest and hilarious portrayal of how kids interact and cope with the world around them.

Growing up in the small town of Cascade, Idaho, isn’t easy for Crutcher. A non-athlete and something of a dim bulb when it comes to common sense (his father referred to him as Lever "Nature’s Simplest Tool"), he approaches each new disastrous adventure in his life with witless enthusiasm. During the course of this autobiography, he gets shot in the head with BB guns, has his teeth knocked out with a baseball bat, is kicked out of Sunday School and humiliated countless times. Anyone else would cringe at revealing such things, but Crutcher seems to revel in sharing his embarrassments. Indeed, he draws valuable lessons from them.

So will teen readers, and adults. Despite his laugh-out-loud antics, Crutcher deals with serious subjects, from death to religion to the consequences of cruelty. He relates many of his experiences to his writing and shows where some of his characters and themes come from. Life as a boy, as any man will tell you, can be mean and bloody, funny and crude. King of the Mild Frontier is the same, so be prepared for a few gross-outs and some foul language. But be prepared to laugh and learn as well.

Your kids have heard it all before: "When I was your age. . . ." Parents who use that phrase usually get the sigh and the eye roll, followed shortly by the glaze. Don't take it personally chances are it's not the message that's…

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