| A Review of: Blue Becomes You by W.P. KinsellaThere are echoes of Anne Tyler, Margaret Laurence , and of course
Arnold Bennett's Old Wives Tale, in this lovely character-driven
novel of small town Manitoba. Charlotte, at 62, is diagnosed with
a heart condition and decides to take early retirement from the
bakery in Norman, MB where she has worked all her adult life. As a
teenager Charlotte, a talented acoustic bass player, had high hopes
of traveling the world as a jazz musician. Just as she and her
boyfriend were about to take off her mother passed away suddenly,
and her father went into a state of shock from which he never
recovered. Charlotte postpones her travel, takes a temporary job
in the bakery and allows her boyfriend to go on without her. The
years pass and by the time her father dies she considers herself
too settled to look for adventure. Her sister June who has also had
a frustrating life (an unrewarding career as a hairdresser in
Winnipeg, a failed engagement to an unsuitable beau) returns home
and the sisters live together in the family house. The story moves
toward Charlotte's big retirement party, while she reconsiders her
life choices, and scans the possibilities for two young coworkers,
a 20-something gay man who has returned home from Winnipeg, and a
spunky young woman who has aspirations of becoming an actress, and
reminds Charlotte of herself as a young woman. This is a beautifully
written, sweet-natured, low key novel, with delightful, fully drawn
characters that stay with you like old friends long after the book
in finished.
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