Let me start by saying one thing: this book is not for everyone.
HOWEVER, it seems Jud wrote this book for me!!
The dry, observational humor is top-notch, the fast-paced and sarcastic dialogue is reminiscent of the coffee-fueled exchanges of the Gilmore Girls, and the historic details are not unnoticed. I chuckled to myself a lot and cackled out loud more than once. I could not stop reading after I started - the charming, flawed characters drew me into a winding and absurd tale. I HAD to find resolution! Aside from a few tiny strings, the story ties up quite nicely, but still leaves me wanting more. After investing almost 600 pages into it, it’s hard to leave Fidget’s Mill behind.
Denton Hedges’ story has a lot to say on the nature and expression of freedom, honor, pride, masculinity, and truth, among many other pre-Revolutionary concerns. Watching Denton, Brisby, Increase, Miss Carsis, and others grapple with these concepts and their consequences amid their own selfish scheming is riveting. Everyone has their own motives, ever-changing as they may be. We as readers are also treated to the inner machinations of minor characters, rendering cohesion to the shifting plane that is Fidget’s Mill social landscape. There is hardly a literary satisfaction as wonderful as seeing disparate narrative cogs click into place and start turning together, something Widing treats us to frequently throughout the whole book. I imagine that when I inevitably read it again, I’ll be sure to glean more treasures from the pages.
I met Jud sitting in a shaded booth at a stupidly hot local maker’s market and talked with him for a couple minutes. During the pleasant conversation, he recommended I start with this book. I’m very glad he did.
Oh and Jud, if you’re reading, I hope you have another suggestion for me because I’ll be back for another book soon. Hopefully it’s not as hot as it was last time!