


Month in Review for April: Gah- is That a.?.Rating: 4.5 of 5 Stars for an exceptional portrait of a town called Verity! If you like contemporary, but aren't afraid of mixing it up with a little suspense and fantastical elements, you should consider giving Turtle Moon a try. Although I would have liked to see a little more about a certain angel that haunts a tree in town, it really couldn't have been a much better read for me. Turtle Moon has every element I love about Alice Hoffman's novels: animals, a small town setting, and genuine human beings as characters. It doesn't mean you won't regret it for the rest of your life." "But doing the right thing doesn't mean you can sleep at night. He has many things he's done wrong in life and realizes that, but sticks relatively to the straight and narrow path as this book plays out. Julian is a man of few words when the book begins, but subtle changes take place in his life throughout the book. Keith seems to get into more trouble when he moves to Verity, pining for New York, where his father lives, instead of the smothering heat of Florida. We also get to see the other side of a relative ne'er-do-well, Keith, and his grown-up equivalent, Julian. Arrow forms a special connection with one of the characters late in the book, proving although he won't let anyone else touch him, he isn't as rabid as he seems. Julian has two dogs he uses to track suspects: Loretta, a relatively well-behaved shepherd, and Arrow, a semi-feral "air dog" whose nose can track anything rotten, even long-dead things. In this book, the main theme is dogs, although a gator does pop up in the course of the story. Julian Cash, who is a specialist with Verity's canine police unit, uses his dogs to dig up clues to Keith's whereabouts, but will the murderer be found in time?Īnimals always seem to crop up in Alice Hoffman's books, whether it's the doves of The Dovekeepers, the horses of The Foretelling, or the wolves of Second Nature. When the meanest boy in Verity, Florida, Keith, runs away with an orphaned baby girl whose mother has been murdered, his mother Lucy refuses to believe he's guilty of the crime, even when evidence suggests otherwise. Even though it seems a relatively placid place to live, the month of May brings about drastic changes in the town. Verity is newly inundated with single mothers, due to the low cost of living and the scenery. In the case of this novel, most of the magical realism elements are set around the human connection to animals, and the chaos around month of May that takes over the small town of Verity, Florida every year. She's well-known for her use of magical realism, taking fantastic elements and weaving them into the plot of something set in our world, without the 'start-from-scratch' world building of urban fantasy. I generally dislike anything contemporary, but in the case of Alice Hoffman novels, I love it.
