Joyce Jackson's life is dedicated to the memory of Elvis, but the state of California wants to prove she is a welfare cheat. But from Joyce, caseworker Emily Shaw learns the power of music, memory, and the imagination. The author of Beggars and Choosers, Kalpakian's writing is magical with sexual energy, spiritual largesse, and musical genius.
I hate to disagree with everyone, especially since I wanted to love this book so badly. Why the author chose to start it with Emily, I will never understand. I couldn't stand her. This twenty-three year old goes around lecturing someone twenty years her senior about "being an old maid" (in 1982!), doesn't know that home economics was a required class in 1957 (I do and I'm just a "dumb millennial") and feels the need to tell her client that SHE took college prep. Way too much time is spent on Emily's obnoxious rich family and their opinions, her whining about her fiancee who is away at law school and so on. I just didn't care. By the time we flashed back a Europe vacation with her parents, I was done with her. I didn't care if it was August 16th 1977, I wasn't going to read that. I thought it would get better once we were done with Emily and while it did, I still wasn't loving it. The jumping between first and third person didn't help. Some authors (and they are few) can pull it off, but not Laura Kalpakian. At some point, I just started skimming because it was that or taking weeks or months to get through this book.
I wanted to love Joyce's quirky character but I had a hard time even with that. What Elvis fan would name their dog after Colonel Parker of all people, and why in the world did she like the obnoxious Emily? She should have seen through her lies about being an Elvis fan when Emily didn't even know a single Elvis song because she is "not good with titles".
This book was chosen by my book group back in 1998. The author is local and came to our discussion of her book, an enjoyable tale about a young woman on welfare who’s obsessed with Elvis. I remember it as a pleasant evening, but don’t know if it was because we really liked the book or liked the author—maybe both.
A favorite book of mine. It was made into a tv movie that starred and produced by Roseanne and screen play by Rita Mae Brown . This book showed the relationship between a woman on welfare and her Social Worker. Such a great look into how social class and prejudice clouds our perception of others even in a therapeutic relationship.