publication June 9, 2015 |
The Truth According to Us by Annie Barrows, co-author
of the Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Society, takes us to depression era
Macedonia, West Virginia, a place between the north and south so much that it
changed sides in the civil war 37 times. A town in West Virginia where the
major industry, and employer, is not coal, but the American Everlasting Hosiery
Company, and southern pride runs deep.
Willa Romeyn, age 12, is a natural born sneak. She lives
with her Aunt Jottie, her sister bird and sometimes her charmingly dangerous
father, Felix in the house their parents lived in when they founded the
American Everlasting Hosiery Company and earned their place in the pages of
Macedonia history. The family has fallen
on hard times so that in 1938, they take in a boarder who eventually complicates
everything. Willa spends the 500 plus pages of this delightful book figuring
out how the family changed and why, and grows up along the way. She figures out
who she is and what is important, all the while trying to follow the town
values of “Ferocity and Devotion.”
Barrows has a gift with historically based fiction and she’s
recreated the slow pace of a southern summer, right down to the hey you porch
visits of neighbors on Sunday afternoon.
Willa, a free spirit who idolizes her daddy, for the most part enjoys
the freedom of an era gone by, reading books that are too mature for her over
and over again, slipping into neighbors houses to visit and explore and
becoming a full member of Geraldine’s Army determined to beat the Reds. Her jealousy is aroused when her beloved
father takes up with the boarder, Layla Beck, a Senator’s daughter, who is
writing the history of Macedonia as part of the WPA writers project after
having been cut off by her rich father for refusing to marry a man of his
choosing.
Willa reminds us of young Scout Finch in To Kill a
Mockingbird, and Layla is as silly as any Victorian heroine. Neither of them are reliable narrators
though, for that we trust only the indomitable Jottie, whose life has centered
around taking care of her family. Even
though technically, the family belongs to her brother. The pace of this small
town, with drama and intrigue woven between glasses of iced tea and bootleg
whiskey, keeps this book moving. The
loyalty between the family members and friends, with all the quirks of people
you know, or wish you did, keeps it from slipping into sentimentality. It is a place you will miss when you close
the cover.
More info about Truth:http://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/9072/the-truth-according-to-us-by-annie-barrows/
I received this book from NetGalley for this
review.
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