Anne Tyler was 24 when she wrote "The Tin Can Tree." Seems impossible, but true. It was only her second book ever in a series of 24 novels. Her last was written this year 2025 at the age of 83. What a remarkable, longstanding talent.
She has become one of my favorite novelists along with Louise Erdrich of the "Love Medicine" series of novels. They have in common many strong female leads. I use the word "lead" because it's easy to imagine either author's books as movies: they paint such a strong picture in the reader's brain. In addition, Tyler's children wormed their way into my heart where they remained for days after finishing one of her books. In TTCT, the child character who grabbed my heart is Simon, an endearing 10 year old who is stoic, yet devastated by the death of his 6 year old sister in a tractor accident.
He walked stiffly and blindly, with his sharp little shoulder-bones sticking out through the back of his jacket.
I've read this description before about Thomas in "Saint Maybe" whose back was a sharp coat hanger.
In this case, the strong female lead is Joan Pike, a 26 year old young woman, who is living with Mr. and Mrs. Pike, her aunt and uncle, rather than with her elderly parents. She's living there because she became very attached to the children and was asked to stay. How could one NOT become attached to these children? In fact, Simon only becomes more endearing when Joan gives him a home haircut, leaving him with short tufts of hair all around his head. I just wanted to tousle his hair and tell him everything will turn out alright...I hope!
The Pikes (Aunt Lou, Uncle Roy, Joan, Simon, Janie Rose is deceased), the Greens (James and his handicapped brother Ansel), and the elderly Potter sisters all live together yet separately in something like a triplex. Apparently this kind of housing was common in small towns near Baltimore back in the day.
Joan and James have some sort of a romance going on.
In the evenings she sat with James, every evening talking of the same things and never moving forward or backwards with him.
James is a photographer and there is a lot of interesting discussion about how people would rather not have themselves captured in a picture because it's a frozen non-them. Aunt Hattie has this opinion of portraiture. Nevertheless, she is forced by her daughter to have her portrait taken by James. She greatly dislikes the idea. Furthermore, she's afraid because the last photographer came right up to me and pushed my face sideways but my shoulders full-front, and my knees sideways but my feet full-front, so I swear, I felt like something on an Egyptian wall. That description had me chortling unexpectedly. After all the poignancy, I was surprised by the humorous bits!
Meanwhile, Aunt Lou has gone comatose due to grief. There is a plot afoot to get her out of bed by returning her to her previous job as a seamstress in her home. Involved in the plot are Connie Hammond (Aunt Hattie's daughter), Joan, and Simon. Connie brings the pieces of a dress Lou was working on and does manage to get her out of bed, downstairs, and starting to work on it. Simon keeps up a steady stream of conversation/gossip to keep her engaged. It seems to be successful, until Lou suddenly falls headfirst onto her sewing machine and injures herself.
Most of the book is extremely sad. If you've recently experienced the death of a loved one or are generally feeling down, now might not be the time to read it. Wait until the time is right!
Here's some more about James and Joan. James has to take his pictures to the local newspaper. While in his darkroom, he sees the picture of Joan in a dust storm. Of course, it's his favorite.
Her figure made a straight, black line through a circle of wavery blurs, and her head was bent forward in that way she had when she walked. He didn't know how many hundreds of times he had seen her like that. He was really paying attention and her stride shows a lot about her strength of character.
They are very stuck. He can't really marry her because he has to take care of Ansel. She can't really enact any change in their relationship. What will they do? Will she leave? If Joan were to leave, James would want to say Come back. And will you marry me? But he can't because he has Ansel.
I can't tell you if the stuck will come unstuck. What will happen to Joan and James? Will Simon, Uncle Roy, and Aunt Lou begin to heal from Janie Rose's death? Here's one more quote about Simon showing the characterization.
He began walking in those small circles of his, with his eyes on his boots.
That's all till the next Anne Tyler or maybe a Raymond Carver or 2.