Thursday, January 17, 2019

To Be Where You Are

To Be Where You Are. Jan Karon. G. P. Putnam's Sons. October 2017. 450 pages. Source - Audio book.

First sentence: It was the first day of October, and all things considered, Mitford was pretty quiet. 

Plot: After twelve years of wrestling with the conflicts of retirement, Father Tim Kavanagh realizes he doesn't need a steady job to prove himself. Then he's given one. As for what it proves, heaven only knows.

Millions of Karon fans will be thrilled that it's life as usual in the wildly popular Mitford series: A beloved town character lands a front-page obituary, but who was it, exactly, who died? And what about the former mayor, born the year Lindbergh landed in Paris, who's still running for office? All this, of course, is but a feather on the wind compared to Muse editor J.C. Hogan's desperate attempts to find a cure for his marital woes. Will it be high-def TV or his pork chop marinade?

In fiction, as in real life, there are no guarantees.

Twenty minutes from Mitford at Meadowgate Farm, newlyweds Dooley and Lace Kavanagh face a crisis that devastates their bank account and impacts their family vet practice.

But there is still a lot to celebrate, as their adopted son, Jack, looks forward to the most important day of his life--with great cooking, country music, and lots of people who love him. Happily, it will also be a day when the terrible wound in Dooley's biological family begins to heal because of a game--let's just call it a miracle--that breaks all the rules.

In To Be Where You Are, Jan Karon weaves together the richly comic and compelling lives of two Kavanagh families, and a cast of characters that readers around the world now love like kin.

My thoughts:  I was kind of disappointed in this one from Jan Karon.  Not sure what I expected but I don't feel it lived up to the hype prior to it being published.  To be fair maybe I waited too long to actually read it.

I feel like the story didn't flow very well. It seemed to jump around from person/family often times making me think, "who is this now?".  My favorite situation in this one is when Father Tim brings home a new dog from Dooley and Lacey's.  After the passing of Barnabus I didn't think Father Tim would have another.  But I was happy to see him with another.

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