A recent widow copes with a surprising new life in Sandlin's buoyant latest, set in 1964 in a small Texas town.
When railroad man Robert Kratke unexpectedly dies of a heart attack, Eliza, his wife of 30 years, discovers that he had been living a double life, with another wife and family on the other side of town, and that the savings she thought they had have vanished. Reluctant to burden her children by moving in with them, she rents out their house—which she can't sell, because the other wife has put a lien on it—and moves into an efficiency in the Sweet Vidalia Residence Inn, a motel populated mostly by students and others in their early 20s. With no work experience and three years before she will be eligible for her husband's Social Security benefits, she enrolls in business school and finds she has an aptitude for the material. As she gets to know her neighbors and fellow students and finds an unlikely business opportunity, she evolves from a “preparer” who “dislike[s] suspense” to someone who's delighted to realize that her “life is lively.” Despite a somewhat erratic plot, in which Sandlin introduces new characters and dilemmas at a brisk pace without resolving all of them, the novel has a nostalgic charm, and it's impossible not to cheer for Eliza and the members of her motley tribe. Sandlin tempers the more melodramatic elements with quirky humor, and she has a gift for summing up a character in a sentence or two, like the classmate with “doll-baby eyelashes” and a “contrary laugh, made up of malice and merriness.” Fans of Anne Tyler should be happy to greet Sandlin as a Texan cousin.
A novel that endearingly proves it's never to too late to come of age.