Bless.
When I started listening to this audio book, I didn't realise it was a younger readers story. I went in blind, and don't mind that I did. The narration was perfect, Abbe Holmes was lyrical with all voices, delivered with a full heart. For this book to be fully appreciated, I believe it would be more for adults, and children would enjoy at a more surface level, the younger they are.
It is the 1970’s, Ohio. Lenny Spink is a spunky character, a gregarious and smart young child. She's an awesome big sister to Davey, and a great daughter. She needs to be, her family has been abandoned by a father who couldn't care less, with no relatives, they need to be self-sufficient.
They have a lovely and eccentric neighbour Mrs Gaspar, an elderly Hungarian elderly who has vivid dreams, told to the children in a fairytale way, always piquing Lenny’s attention. This family gets by. But as the story progresses, their real struggle turns to joy, getting by is not what they do - they thrive despite their circumstance. Mrs Gasper cares for the children like her own, while Mrs Spink works two jobs.
Mrs Spink feels things, she has a heightened sense of doom, and this happens as her second born seems to be a happy baby initially but begins to grow at an alarming rate. A happy and contended boy, we see his eager and happy nature, while judged by others with Lenny always by his side to protect. There are many heartbreaking moments in this magnificently crafted book, one which punched me was a nun treating this family with distain on the first day of preschool. This woman of God almost used the word monster to describe our lovely boy Davey.
This story is one that spins all the characters together in a kind of gold thread, fluidly weaving, ducking, and diving to create a shiny perfect creation which may seem bumpy and faltering all the way through given Davey's struggle.
Words and learning are a big part of this narrative. The author’s notes acknowledge her love of the encyclopedia and other sources, and she uses this theme seamlessly as each volume is received. This family I grew to love may not have had a wealth of material goods, but this one physical object was their main source of passion. Mrs Spink won this, and we were witness to her letter writing prowess, and the further correspondence with the sales manager made me smile so much, in fact this element captured much of the core basis of the book. Lenny became enamoured with beetles, and Davey Great Bear Lake in Canada. All these parts are important to the whole.
The cast of characters are all a joy. The almost sneaky build-up of emotions, the intricate relationships and authentic struggle of the Spink family really grabbed me hard. I was crying in the end, observing Lenny grow up, being strong for other adults showing their vulnerabilities so openly. Mrs Spink was a fabulous mother, doggedly working hard, never complaining. Nanny Flora’s phone calls, her lack of physical presence presented the theme of family distance within a fractured family, Nanny was presented to us as being sanitised; more pristine than helpful when the family was going through so much. This was more fleshed out towards the end.
I am in awe of this author’s storytelling ability. Often stories that cover so much ground become bogged down, this one was not. It was full of heart, heartbreak, acceptance, and learning. I loved every character, the bad ones were well fleshed out also, we saw their motivations and their effects, and cheered when the others triumphed over these.
It took me years to read this book after discovering it, that’s the downfall of wanting too many books all at once, they may sink in the quicksand that is our TBR. I so highly recommend this book to anyone who loves to feel, has empathy, and can spare the heartstrings to be pulled.
I listened to this via the BorrowBox platform and my public library.