Mrs Harris's neighbours, the foul Gussets, are ill-treating their foster child, little Henry, whose British mother has remarried after her divorce from her American husband. Determined to somehow get Henry to his father (whom she's certain will turn the boy's life around), Mrs Harris gets it into her mind to go to America. But there's many a slip between the cup and the lip, of course...
I'd read Mrs 'arris Goes to Paris last week, and I loved that so much, as soon as I finished it, I began this one. Like the first book, this one too has similar themes: Mrs Harris's simple charm, her courage and general good-naturedness wins her friends; people, many of them under the influence of Mrs Harris, who end up doing good. There is a flavour of the country Mrs Harris travels to. There are interesting characters around Mrs Harris - who, of course, is quite a character in herself.
I didn't find this as absolutely wonderful as Mrs 'arris Goes to Paris. It's still a wonderful, heartwarming book, funny at times and always full of feeling, but I suppose for me it was a case of familiarity beginning to breed contempt. I'd seen this all before (and, frankly, Mrs Harris in France, and that too in Dior, is much, much more a duck out of water than Mrs Harris in America, which is why it's also more satisfying). Somehow, the way Mrs Harris conquered France touched me more deeply than this. I feel, too, that there was a novelty about the first book, the situation, the character, and all, that wasn't around here.
Still, despite all of that, very enjoyable.