In Dandelion Summer by Lisa Wingate, J. Norman Alvord is a retired widower with heart trouble. As he fades in and out of consciousness from an angina incident, he has a vivid memory of a house with seven chairs and a black maid. His mother never had a maid, and he was an only child. Norman wonders if this is truly a memory or a figment of his imagination. If it's real, where was this house and who was the woman?
Norman's daughter, Deborah, is at her wit's end with her curmudgeonly father. They've never gotten along, but she promised her mother she'd take care of him. She tries to nudge him to think about moving to a facility. but he refuses. So for the short term, she hires a woman to come in once a week to clean her father's house and the woman's daughter to come in two days a week after school to make dinner, clean up the kitchen, and keep an eye out for her dad.
The daughter, Epiphany, has an Italian mother and black father, though her father is long gone. Epiphany, or Epie, as she is sometimes called, doesn't feel like she fits in anywhere. She's bullied at school until the school's basketball star takes a liking to her. But he is bad news.
Epie and Norman don't hit it off at first. They are opposites in almost every way. But when Epie agrees to keep some of his secrets, like Norman's searching for clues about the house in his dreams upstairs, where his daughter has forbidden him to go, Norman grudgingly accepts Epie's presence. Eventually he tells her what he s searching for and accepts her help bringing boxes from the attic.
Clues and more emerging memories lead Norman and Epie to a road trip for more information. But with Norman's heart trouble and Epie's inexperience, will they make it?
The point of view switched back and forth between Norman and Epie. I listened to the audiobook wonderfully read by Jason Culp and Bahni Turpin. Their voices and expressions added so much more to the reading/listening experience.
This book was the fourth in Wingate's Blue Sky Hill series. I hadn't read any except the second book, The Summer Kitchen, but I didn't feel there were any gaps that didn't make sense. This book stood well enough on its own.
Though I thought the road trip was unlikely in real life, the author made it plausible. I enjoyed the slowly developing relationship between Norman and Epie--first just tolerating each other, then learning to appreciate things about each other, and then coming to truly care for each other like a grandparent and grandchild.
The mystery of Norman's background was unraveled quite nicely, keeping me curious and invested throughout the book.
I was struck by how both Norman and Epie were misunderstood from the outside. In the book, we're privy to their thoughts and circumstances that no one else knows. Epie seems like an underachieving student to her teachers, but they have no idea what she has to deal with from the other students and a mom who has gone from man to man. And they don't take the time to find out what underlying problems there might be. Yet Norman can see her innate intelligence and the need to be nurtured.
Some quotes that stood out to me:
Maybe not everyone got the mom who baked cupcakes and showed up at all the school parties. There weren't enough of those to go around, so maybe God used other people, like Mrs. Lora and J. Norm, to make sure you learned how to shell a purple hull pea or find Saturn in the night sky.
I would have lived more fully in the moment, realize how easily a perfect day can slip by unnoticed. Any day is the glory day if you choose to see the glory in it.
It's funny how mistakes are so much clearer after you've already made them.
Wingate has a penchant for sometimes halting the flow of dialogue by putting extra information between the speaker's answers (one of my writing pet peeves). But overall, I really enjoyed this book.
No comments:
Post a Comment