There was a time back in the late 1970s, when Anthony first started his series on Xanth, a fantasy series with lots of fantastic creatures, lots of fun and lots of puns. Anthony is a master of that. I read everything he wrote including at least two other series--one about death, and another about a world split into halves--one magical, the other scientific. Fascinating stuff. At some point, I tired of the puns, I guess, or just moved on to other things. I read Anthony's autobiography: Bio of an Ogre, and decided he didn't sound like a very nice guy. I didn’t read any more of his books after that.
Flash forward a lifetime, and I was surprised to come across this book that shows a totally different and much more likeable person. In fact, I'm questioning now why I thought he wasn't so nice. To be fair, he called himself an ogre and I guess I believed him. At any rate, I enjoyed this book of letters he wrote to a young girl who had been hit by a drunk driver and in a coma for a while. Slowly, she recovered from the coma. Apparently, she was a lover of Xanth novels too and her mother wrote to Anthony mentioning that and so began the one-sided correspondence that lasts for quite some time. He ends the book after one year of letters, adding an afterword telling a bit about her progress. He really has to work to find new things to say, so ending when he does is a wise choice.
But we really come to know him more than her. She can't respond after all, and his letters are an attempt to lift her spirits and encourage her in working to get better. I'm sure they also encouraged her family. He writes her at least once a week, telling of what he sees on his runs through his land in Florida--the spiders and birds--one made a nest in the basket on his bicycle. He speaks of mundane things, but also his books and research and the character he created for her in one of the Xanth books--Jenny Elf, who also appears in a later book.
I think I may just have to pick up another of his books. I was amazed to see he's still at it. He's up to #47 in the Xanth series! He mentions several books, one based on the finding of a Native American burial mound in Florida. His daughter was at the dig and encouraged him to explore writing about it. He did extensive research on the tribe and came up with a fictionalized version of what their lives might have been like. If I can find a copy, I'll offer my take on it. Reviews on Goodreads are very mixed.