Helpful Score: 3
I have read several books by Pamela Morsi and haven't found a bad one yet. She writes wonderful stories about ordinary people that might have lived in your own town. Her stories make me feel good.
The heroine in this story is Esme Crabb and she has to be the practical one. Her dad is the laziest man in the entire county and seems to be proud of that fact. Her sisters, who are twins, are a little lacking in brains so the burden of providing for the family falls on her. She is determinded to make a better life for her and her family so she makes up a plan to snare the richest man in town for a husband.
Esme's not beautiful, she thinks, and so she has to use her brains to capture the attention of Cleavis Rye. Esme has been raised a "hillbilly" and Cleavis is an educated store keeper. She has to think of a way to gain his interest and so begins to follow him around and insinuates herself into his life. Before he knows what hit him she's wormed her way into a job in the store, driving him crazy, and making him lust after her.
Esme is an honest and funny person and it was enjoyable to see her lose her cool while trying to snare Cleavis. He calls her "Hillbaby" and gets all hot under the collar while trying to ignore her. This book is a really fun read and nothing really bad happens in the entire book. Morsi has a gift for turning even the worst of the characters into a real person. This, like all of Morsi's books I have read, is the perfect book to settle down in your easy chair with.
The heroine in this story is Esme Crabb and she has to be the practical one. Her dad is the laziest man in the entire county and seems to be proud of that fact. Her sisters, who are twins, are a little lacking in brains so the burden of providing for the family falls on her. She is determinded to make a better life for her and her family so she makes up a plan to snare the richest man in town for a husband.
Esme's not beautiful, she thinks, and so she has to use her brains to capture the attention of Cleavis Rye. Esme has been raised a "hillbilly" and Cleavis is an educated store keeper. She has to think of a way to gain his interest and so begins to follow him around and insinuates herself into his life. Before he knows what hit him she's wormed her way into a job in the store, driving him crazy, and making him lust after her.
Esme is an honest and funny person and it was enjoyable to see her lose her cool while trying to snare Cleavis. He calls her "Hillbaby" and gets all hot under the collar while trying to ignore her. This book is a really fun read and nothing really bad happens in the entire book. Morsi has a gift for turning even the worst of the characters into a real person. This, like all of Morsi's books I have read, is the perfect book to settle down in your easy chair with.