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Book Review of Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter (P.S.)

Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter (P.S.)
coconutlibrary avatar reviewed on + 12 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 14


Type: {Airplane Read: makes time fly.}
Rating: {An Unputdownable: Couldnt eat or sleep until I finished this book.}

Why Youre Reading It:

You enjoy a well written book and a compelling plot
You find unique characters refreshing
You love the South, and the books that feature it as a character
A well thought out mystery keeps you turning pages

What I Thought:

Wow. Wow, wow, wow. I have been texting my friends telling them to go get a copy of this book for book clubs, airplane trips, or just sitting on their porch and reading this weekend. I devoured every word of this; part character study, part mystery, part exploration of a small town in Mississippi. How to get you to read this? Im not sure what to say that would convey the message.

This story explores how misconceptions can break a person but not their soul; how important it is to tell the truth, tell the truth, tell the truth; how sometimes the most beaten down people can be the most loving and how sometimes they can be the most disturbed. It will make you feel love for someone who, if you actually lived in this fictional town, you would probably fear. It will make you wonder who you are ignoring, neglecting, judging. It will make you think about how much you ridicule and isolation you could endure if made to do so.

Interwoven in the richness of the characters and their plights is a mystery; about a girl who went missing 25 years ago and another who went missing in the past few weeks. What happened to these girls, why it happened, and the effect it caused on the people left behind will have you tearing through the pages of this incredibly readable, short novel.

Please read it and do so before they make the movie; the rights have been bought and it is being optioned, but there is so much that they wont be able to capture. So read it this summer, you wont be sorry.

*One last thing: I will forgive Tom Franklin for using my name the way he did. But looking forward to someone, someday naming a charming, lovely, female character Wallace.