Whistling Past the Graveyard by Susan Crandall
Posted: 25 Feb 2015, 20:51
The cover and many reviews of this book tout it as the next "To Kill a Mockingbird" or "The Help". Well, its neither of those things. Maybe I'm being unfair because, if I'm being honest, no book will ever compare to "To Kill a Mockingbird" for me. But I simply can't put Susan Crandall on the same pedestal as Harper Lee (let's hope she doesn't disappoint when we get a chance to read 'Go Set a Watchman").
That is, however, not to say that I didn't like the book. In fact, by the end, I had fallen in love with the main characters, Starla and Eula. I just didn't start out loving them. I had to build up to it and slowly.
As you may have guessed, "Whistling Past the Graveyard" is set in the deep South in the 1960's, on the cusp of the Civil Rights movement. Starla is escaping (running away) from the unforgiving grandmother who is responsible for her and Eula is just too God-fearing not to pick her up and offer assistance - even if the differences in their skin color is going to raise a lot of eyebrows and cause a bit of a stir.
In many places the dialogue is too colloquial and too obvious to feel like Susan Crandall has really spent any time in the South. (I know, I've lived here my whole life.) But in the end, I can't deny that the story is touching and the characters make you want to fight for them. My heart broke when Starla's heart was broken and I was just as scared as Eula when Crandall described the terror in her eyes. I may not have liked the writing style but I couldn't deny the story. In truth, I've already recommended this book more than once and will probably read it again myself on a rainy day when all of my other "to read" books are still on hold at the library.
That is, however, not to say that I didn't like the book. In fact, by the end, I had fallen in love with the main characters, Starla and Eula. I just didn't start out loving them. I had to build up to it and slowly.
As you may have guessed, "Whistling Past the Graveyard" is set in the deep South in the 1960's, on the cusp of the Civil Rights movement. Starla is escaping (running away) from the unforgiving grandmother who is responsible for her and Eula is just too God-fearing not to pick her up and offer assistance - even if the differences in their skin color is going to raise a lot of eyebrows and cause a bit of a stir.
In many places the dialogue is too colloquial and too obvious to feel like Susan Crandall has really spent any time in the South. (I know, I've lived here my whole life.) But in the end, I can't deny that the story is touching and the characters make you want to fight for them. My heart broke when Starla's heart was broken and I was just as scared as Eula when Crandall described the terror in her eyes. I may not have liked the writing style but I couldn't deny the story. In truth, I've already recommended this book more than once and will probably read it again myself on a rainy day when all of my other "to read" books are still on hold at the library.