I'd considered giving up on this series earlier, during one book in which Miss Julia seemed to be more malicious than most, but I have seen a couple of good books since then. I think I wouldn't go hunting for more in the series, but if they fall into my lap, I'd probably read them, and hope for the better ones with more of a laugh.
I enjoyed the book (somewhere between 3 and 4 stars), and I'd recommend it (4 stars) to people who'd continued on with this series this far. I'm doubtful that newcomers to the series would understand all the characters involved, and I had to go back and look up one character myself. I doubt I'd re-read the series, though, so it's not a 5-star book.
Still, laughter is a much-needed, much-valuable commodity in our society today. This is satire.
This one had a little slower plot than some of the others (which is why it might be a 3), although it had a good ending, with most of the absurdities happening there. I could envision myself getting into such a scrape trying to help a child out.
I also enjoyed seeing Miss Julia teaching a new teen driver. Actually, though, he did too well off the bat for that to have been very realistic. People let him attempt things too quickly when he was too new to it - like going through a drive-through, for instance. Our kids didn't try that until they were nearly through the learning process.
I had figured out what was going on with the newcomers long before Miss Julia did, but I'd considered other possibilities, too.
It did make me laugh outright a few times, and for that, I'd give it a 4-stars after all.
Miss Julia can't be taken too seriously. This is satire, something I think many reviewers didn't pick up on. Most of Miss Julia's views are nonsense, or, even if they aren't, they're arrived at in a nonsensical manner, not worth being offended over. She doesn't come by her views rationally. She pretty much scorns everyone and everything, so it's not personal. She is a gossip and a busybody, being overly helpful. She isn't a character to emulate, but she does, usually, have a good heart and wish people well. Yes, she (and Mildred, too) do decide too much on others' behalfs, without consulting them.
As always, I loved Sam's calm character, and Lillian's advice, which usually goes unheeded.
One other reviewer did complain about the racism in the book, as far as Lillian living in the undesirable part of town. I agree that the comments about it did sound racist. There was some additional history in one of the earlier books ("Miss Julia Hits the Road", #4) about why Lillian, and some of the other characters, chose to live there despite its problems. I console myself with the thought that Ann Ross made Lillian's character out to be one of the wisest, even if nobody pays attention to her.
Several of the reviewers complained about Miss Julia watching FOX news. That surprised me, too, because it puts her at odds with her thoughts in the earlier books in the beginning of the series. There was also the change in that her first pastor was too conservative for her, and this pastor is too liberal for her. It made me wonder if she's more centrist, or if she's switched political parties somewhere along in the missing books I haven't read. Somehow I doubt that she's switched political parties - I doubt that an author would make that bold of a statement in a book trying to appeal to everyone and generate sales - although you never know. So I imagine that she's more of a centrist character politically. Still, FOX news surprises me, given her earlier thoughts and background. It makes me wonder if it's Sam's influence on her. I don't know what his political views are/were.
I wondered if this was written back in a time before politics were quite so divisive as they are today, but nope, 2019, pretty divisive then, too.
Favorite quotes:
"I wouldn't get too involved with somebody else's problems. It could be misinterpreted and resented."
"Lloyd, some people jus' can't be helped. They won't let you."