As I said in my updates when I started reading this, my maternal aunt read this book and loved it so much that she read it in one day and then mailed it to my mom for her to read. Mom enjoyed it, too (though not quite so much as her sister) so I figured I should try it.
My overall conclusion is that it is a good book. Contemporaries are often a hard sell for me, so it was unlikely to make me love it as much as my aunt did, but even still I see why she enjoyed it so much. This is a very layered story. We start the book with a group of older woman losing their church when it gets shut down and deciding to start their own. Then we have a teen girl discovering that her minister father is having an affair. Finally, we have the recluse who never leaves her house. None of those sound related, right? Ah, but they are, and this is where the author's skill shines. She weaves these three threads together into a touching and uplifting whole. I won't spoil it for you, but it does a beautiful job showing the reader God's grace and ability to work everything for good no matter the circumstances.
If you enjoy complex contemporaries with lots of heart and an uplifting message, then this book is for you.
Content Advisory:
This book is written for adults and I would say it's also appropriate for ages 16+ due to mature themes like marital infidelity.
Language:
After a teen finds out about the affair her father is having, she goes to the woman's house and calls her a "slut" and later says that the woman is a "whore". She also calls her father a pervert to his face.
Sexual/Romance:
One part of the story deals with a broken marriage in which the husband and wife aren't sleeping in the same room anymore and it's revealed that the husband (who is a minister) is having an affair with another woman.
A bully tells the minister's daughter bluntly that her father is having sex with a married woman in his own congregation.
There are never any inappropriate details about the affair, but the husband and wife do have a frank discussion about why it happened.
Violence:
An angry man grabs his daughter's arm roughly and later backhands her across the face. It's the first and last time he ever hits her because she gets away from him.
A teen boy assaults the man who was having an affair with the teen's mother by going to the man's house and punching him repeatedly. The boy is arrested for this and told he had a right to be angry, but not to assault someone.
In a moment of shock and angry recklessness, a teen girl intentionally rises a bike in a dangerous manner and ends up crashing and hurting her shoulder. She claims she was trying to kill herself, but makes no other attempts or even thinks about it again, so this apparently was said to try to upset the person she was talking to.
Drug/Alcohol
An older woman drinks alcohol in front of a teen girl and tells her it tastes awful and shouldn't try it. But later, the same person offers alcohol to an adult woman, convincing her to drink it for stress despite the other woman's moral qualms about it. The drink makes the other woman feel bad the next day, though, and this woman doesn't drink again. The discussion around the drink makes it clear that the older woman is using alcohol as a crutch for emotional issues that need to be addressed in a healthier way.
A woman who doesn't yet understand faith in Jesus sarcastically thinks that another woman has been "sniffing the Bible glue."
Spiritual:
This is Christian fiction and has a strong faith theme throughout. It deals with some hard topics and is honest about the characters' internal faith struggles, but ultimately shows that redemption is available is someone is willing to accept it.
Other:
TRIGGER WARNING for manipulative relationships.
As stated above, a minister is revealed to have been having an affair with a married member of his congregation. The more we see him interact with his wife and daughter, the more we see how manipulative and borderline sociopathic he is. He has lied to his family and lies to his congregation as well, comparing himself to biblical figures like David and Abraham as he claims to feel repentant when he hasn't done anything but tell his wife to put on a good face and cover this up so he won't lose his job. (He loses his job anyway.) Twice, he flies into a rage, scaring his wife and hitting his daughter once. His wife and daughter end up staying with a neighbor to get away from him until he files for a divorce to be with his mistress.