Set in 1930s Alabama, this story is told from the perspectives of the Moore family: father and coal miner Albert, mother Leta, daughters Virgie and Tess, and son Jack. In alternating voices, the family details their life during the Depression, and their experience after a baby was thrown into their well. In particular, nine-year-old Tess is bothered by the baby's death and her subsequent realizations of the darker side of life, one filled with hardship and death that her parents have largely shielded her from. "She kept kicking her feet against the bales like it was normal to have babies lying in the backyard. Normal to have death coming up with the grass, up with the sun, up with the water bucket" (193).
Overwhelmingly, the Moores display themselves, and are viewed by those in the community, as good people. They do what they can for others who are even worse off than they are. Leta constantly refuses food so her children have enough to eat. Albert is deeply troubled by the way black miners are treated. Tess is troubled by her growing realization that other children in her town lead lives full of too much work and too little play.
This novel demonstrates that good can triumph over terrible circumstances and that seemingly unforgivable acts can merely be desperate choices by good people. If anything, my only complaint with this novel is that the main family appears too good. They seem to be viewed by the community as wholly good: "That your sister's real pretty. That your mama and papa give away to anybody that comes askin', that they're big on goin' to church, good people. Your papa don't never talk down to us or act like he's better than us" (228).
Although I liked the Moores - I liked their story, their family, their time period, and the way they interacted with each other and others - yet I felt like the plot of this novel failed to arc or come to a fitting conclusion. Throughout, son Jack's perspective jumps forward in time to reveal the family's contemporary existence, but no explanation is given to why Jack is chosen to jump forward in time and the girls aren't, particularly since Tess seems more central to the plot than anyone else. Yet overall a good debut full of incredibly likeable and respect worthy characters.