Strong Small Town Tale. This is one of those tales that has a bit of a lot. Rich boy falls in love with trailer park trash girl over the course of one fateful teenage summer. Events happen in their small seasonal town, and small seasonal townspeople - including police - respond as small seasonable townspeople all too often do, even in real life.
But what if... what if damn near *everyone* was wrong?
What if the truth of that summer all those years ago was so much more complex? What if virtually *no one* had anywhere near a complete picture of what was happening, due to *everyone* having far too many prejudices and preconceptions?
Can wrongs done that summer all those years ago be corrected all this time later - at least to some degree or another? Can relationships destroyed then - family, community, romantically, and others - be repaired after so much time has passed and so much bitterness has been so deeply internalized?
Novak here provides a stunning tale perfect for summer reading that delves into all of the above in a tale that ultimately leaves the reader a bit breathless and a lot of emotions to deal with. It isn't a comedy, though it has a touch of that. It isn't a romance per se, though it does in fact meet all known qualifications there and may be marketed as such. This is far more a family/ small town drama, and one that plays out quite remarkably well.
Very much recommended.
Originally posted at bookanon.com.
Strong Small Town Tale. This is one of those tales that has a bit of a lot. Rich boy falls in love with trailer park trash girl over the course of one fateful teenage summer. Events happen in their small seasonal town, and small seasonal townspeople - including police - respond as small seasonable townspeople all too often do, even in real life.
But what if... what if damn near *everyone* was wrong?
What if the truth of that summer all those years ago was so much more complex? What if virtually *no one* had anywhere near a complete picture of what was happening, due to *everyone* having far too many prejudices and preconceptions?
Can wrongs done that summer all those years ago be corrected all this time later - at least to some degree or another? Can relationships destroyed then - family, community, romantically, and others - be repaired after so much time has passed and so much bitterness has been so deeply internalized?
Novak here provides a stunning tale perfect for summer reading that delves into all of the above in a tale that ultimately leaves the reader a bit breathless and a lot of emotions to deal with. It isn't a comedy, though it has a touch of that. It isn't a romance per se, though it does in fact meet all known qualifications there and may be marketed as such. This is far more a family/ small town drama, and one that plays out quite remarkably well.
Very much recommended.
Originally posted at bookanon.com.