Where The Heart Is. Billie Letts. 1995. 376 pages. [Source: Bought]
The novel opens circa 1985.
Novalee Nation, the heroine, is seven months pregnant. She is with her
boyfriend, and they're both heading west. He's a man without integrity,
to say the least. He does reluctantly give her a ten dollar bill so she
can go buy some shoes when her own shoes are lost through the hole in
the floor of his car. But he expects a good bit of change back. Or does
he? Was he planning to abandon her at the Walmart all along? Or did he
just get tired of waiting? Does it matter? The truth is that Novalee
Nation is left at a Walmart in a small town in Oklahoma with only $7.77.
She has no family to call, no friends either. So Novalee settles down
in Walmart for the rest of her pregnancy, hiding when need be, so no one
knows that she is living there. She ventures out during the day and
meets people, meets the librarian, for example. By the end of her
pregnancy, she's made a few friends. Now these new friends of hers don't
know the truth exactly. But they're not the type of people who would
care overly much about the truth. Novalee happens to find herself among
the least judgmental folks she's ever met. The book spans seven years
worth of drama. If the book has a theme it is one of 'home' and
'belonging' and 'family.'
Where the Heart Is was not a good
match for me. I wanted a different book, perhaps. A book that kept the
"down-to-earth" quirky characters perhaps, but, lost much of the smut.
It isn't that Where the Heart Is is your traditional smutty romance--it
isn't, far from it. But I thought there were certainly plenty of details
that were tasteless. Why did readers need to follow Willy Jack's story
at all???? Every chapter that focused on Willy Jack seemed tasteless and
pointless. Why do we need to know about his time in prison?
If the story had centered exclusively on Novalee Nation, would I have
liked it a bit more? I think I would have. At least I wouldn't have
hated it. Eliminating Willy Jack wouldn't have solved all the problems,
one scene that was too much to take, and rightly so, was the child rape.
The scene had every right to be disturbing. It was a horrible awful
situation. Still. The details were too much. The profanity--the
blasphemy--was also too much.
© 2014 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews
2 comments:
I read this one ages ago after the movie came out. I think the movie colored my view of the book so I enjoyed it more.
I read this book a long time ago and remember enjoying it. I think I remember liking the movie more, which is unusual.
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