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Review of Carolyn Howard-Johnson's This Is The Place - by Rolf Gompertz |
This Is The Place
ISBN
Published by AmErica House © 2001 ORDER!

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This is the Place is a magnificent book and Carolyn Howard-Johnson is a magnificent writer. Her book is a joy to read. It is a work of literary art. It has something to say. It is an important book. It is a book that touches the heart, mind and soul. This is the Place is about 19-year-old Skylar Harriet Eccles, aka Sky, trying to figure out who she is, what she wants to be, and where she belongs. It is about marriage and domesticity, Mormon-style, and about young Arthur Benson, who loves Sky and wants to marry her. It is about Utah, 1959, and the Salt Lake Valley, where Brigham Young declared, "This is the place," and settled his persecuted flock some hundred years earlier. It is about three living generations of Sky's family, whose men are Mormons, with one a direct descendant of The Church's founding prophet, Joseph Smith. It is about Sky's Protestant mother, who would not convert, and Sky's grandmother and great grandmother, who did. Sky puts it all in a nutshell when she asks, at one point, "So Seeking to calm her down, her aunt Neesha, who is only a few years older, suggests, "If the great mystery of life is who we are, you and I are not going to find it today." "Probably not," Sky agrees, but wonders "what we would do with ourselves if we actually found out." The book opens with a story about a piano, which belongs to Gram Harry tries to keep Sky in line when she sees her Howard-Johnson's words, indeed, are her music. She writes with journalistic clarity and poetic beauty and power. Her writing is especially rich in delightful, enlightening similes, which appear unexpectedly, like refreshing, hidden springs. Consider these: "The night was heavy and the moon was gray, washed with clouds like mottled oatmeal." (p. 162) "Sky didn't tell her (Stella) that (her eyes) were melancholy 'There was no difficulty for him in choosing her, dainty as a "Big raindrops started to clap, like scattered applause, across Howard-Johnson knows the people and places intimately and captures the inner and outer worlds with subtle, startling and telling detail. The author has found a deceptively simple, intriguing way of We read about Sky Eccles, Harriet Skylar Eccles, Sky and The chapter subheadings suggest the point and plot direction: The author cares about each of her characters and makes us Sky observes the many forms of prejudice and cruelty. After The book is about how the persecuted become the persecutors; how those who have suffered from bigotry and prejudice become bigoted and prejudiced. It is about "us" and "them," about inclusion and exclusion, about the comforts and benefits of belonging - and the price of belonging. It is about the family or the group imposing its will on the individual. It is about the individual vs. the group, and the liberation, survival and freedom of each. If these themes resonate with you---any time, any place---then this is the time, the place, and the book for you.
Rolf Gompertz is the author of eight books, including, Abraham, The Dreamer/An Erotic and Sacred Love Story, a provocative, biblical novel about Abraham, his wife, Sarah, and "the other woman", Hagar. The paperback may be browsed and ordered at http://www.iUniverse.com , http://www.amazon.com , or ordered from iUniverse's toll free number 1/877/823-9235 or any bookstore. Mailto: rolfgompertz@yahoo.com
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