I was actually really impressed with this book, much more than I thought that I would be. I mean, it starts out with a girl, Pea, going in search of her sister's reincarnated soul. It seemed like a pretty far-fetched premise to me. What I didn't expect was a really heart-wrenching and touching tale.
Pea, or Eudora as her full name is and is later called, has a lot of guilt on her shoulders, which is really what is driving all of this. She's grieving. She's so determinded to find the family that she's lost, she can't see that she isn't really coping with that lost. And, later in the book when she's about to leave Jewel, she questions her motives. She questions why she suddenly believes that her sister is going to be reincarnated when Pea never believed in any of that before. I liked that she didn't come to this realization until later because people do some crazy things when they're dealing with loss. Sometimes their thought process isn't entirely rational and I like that hers isn't. That's how it works sometimes. Grief works differently for everyone.
I also really like the small town that Pea runs into. Even though it's such a stereotypical small town (everyone knowing everyone else's business), I like it. As ridiculous as that may seem, the smaller the town, the more likely it is that everyone knows exactly what's going on in your like. While the town I spent the last few years in is not quite as small as Jewel, it isn't exactly a thriving metropolis and it has a lot of the same characteristics as Jewel does. Most people know each other, they've spent their lives there, they're aware of everything that is going on in the town and there are certain prejudices that they just can't seem to pull away from.
Pea seems to run into every hopeless case in Texas on her journey, which gets a little tedious. Especially because I don't always see the point in all of the people and creatures that she runs into. Val I felt was supposed to be her love interest but his story just... dropped off, which I was really annoyed by. I mean, I liked that the story didn't get side tracked by Val and him getting gooey eyed over Pea but part of the great thing about this book is that everyone has their own journey they have to take, that they have to deal with and they have to accomplish. We never really get to see the end of Val's journey and that really bothers me. Also, I'm not completely sure the role that Alex plays in this book. I mean, she's there, it's interesting to see her grow and become the person she does but she doesn't quite have the effect on Pea's life that say, Glory and Lorena do.
Brashear also tended to start forgetting characters towards the end. I understood the need to focus on Pea, but we started to see Alex less and less and Val almost not at all (and then he left so it really WAS not at all.) Also, she picked up a cat, Isis, and I really liked her interactions with the animal but the cat was barely given a passing mention towards then end when in the beginning Isis had such an important role.
I loved Lorena. She was this great character who was tough yet gentle at the same time. Pea loved her because she was such a sweet woman. She loved her because Lorena believed in Pea, believed in her strength and believed in her abilities despite Pea doubting herself. And Glory was much the same way (another character you can't help but love despite her gruff exterior.)
There were even things about Pea that made me relate so well to her. She adored reading and considered her books more family and friend than any person. She was also six foot tall, something you don't see often in a female protagonist. Usually they're petite, so, as a girl who only falls an inch below Pea, I really loved that she was so tall and pretty comfortable in her own body.
Overall, it was a heart-warming tale that really surprised me. It was well written and was just a feel good tale.