By: Valerie Fraser Luesse
Hennepin County Library paperback 286 pages plus extras
Published: 2025
Genre: Christian historical fiction
We're discussing this tonight, so I'm glad I finished it! It was enjoyable, but not one I adored. Protagonist Edie Gardner has returned to Bayou du Chêne, Mississippi, from NYC to spend time with her grandmother Adele "Punk" Cheramie. Punk's friends Coco, Cookie, and Sugar (really) become part of Edie's circle as she recovers from the shock and pain of losing her best friend Leni (to some unspecified awful sickness).
Set in 2002, Hurricane Camille (1969) and the allure of the coast and the ocean showcase the beauty and power of their environment. Horn Island seems to hold a mystical quality for these women.
For a book I didn't fall in love with, I sure have a lot of post-it notes sticking out! I may cull some as I type . . .
Page 47: Honestly, Punk and her friends were more fun than most women my age. I think at a certain point - and the Ten Spots had reached it - women throw decorum to the four winds and do exactly as they please. They aren't the least bit self-conscious about anything.''
I love that about getting older! It's nice to be less self-conscious!
Page 50-1: The official state line between Mississippi and Louisiana extends into the gulf. You can see it on maps, but I have no idea how watermen keep up with which side they're on. . . . Sometimes I feel like I'm navigating invisible lines myself, like the one between how things were and how they are now, the line between Leni up there and me down here.
This made me think of our trip to Gunflint Lake at the end of August! Canada is right across the lake . . . but I didn't have my passport and stayed on what I thought was the US side. That invisible line (on a map and in life) is a wonderful analogy.
When Edie asked the mysterious Jason about the Hebrew words written in the sand, he replied, "Help one, save one, lead one home." (Page 54) I had to mark this because it was referenced again later and I didn't hold it in my brain.
The Mudpie - "Punk's signature dessert" - sounds yummy. I may try making it. "Two layers, one of chocolate pudding, the other a blend of cream cheese and Cool Whip, were spread over a nutty, buttery crust. Punk topped the whole thing with more Cool Whip, chopped pecans, and chocolate curls."
A lot of the food in this book sounded amazing! Some of it didn't appeal to me, but I love how the author described the love of these women for one another and for the delicacies they enjoyed.
Page 64: "She was the only friend I ever had who could make sense of all my pieces. She was always in my corner, one hundred percent, but wouldn't hesitate to tell me when I'd gone off the rails."
Edie is telling her mom's best friend Charlotte - aka "Charly" - about why she misses Leni so much. It's good to have a dear friend who truly understands and accepts you but who also helps you stay on track! I have both Jenifer and Louie. I am blessed!
Page 77: I could have predicted that Cole was about to reach for the saltshaker. He never saw a French fry he didn't want to drown in Morton's. He was doing it right now.
Yes! I feel the same way, Cole. French fries need a healthy dose of salt to truly taste good. I laughed when I read this line and then read it aloud to Louie. He claimed I'd salt my ketchup and dip the fries in that . . .
Page 88: "Say you want to spend the day at the beach, but you feel like you need to clean out the garage instead. If you found out you had just six months to live, would you be saying to yourself, 'I sure wish I'd kept a cleaner garage'? No.You'd be saying, 'I sure wish I'd spent more afternoons on that beautiful beach.'"
Cookie is sharing her "six months to live" wisdom with the others. I'm not sure I agree with her 100%. Why would anything dull but productive get done? But sometimes the "long view" makes for a richer life.
Page 107-8: Can you imagine how humiliated and terrified she must've been? Not all bruises are physical. Matter of fact, some of the worst ones aren't."
Punk is sharing part of Miss Sugar's personal story to Edie and Charly. Punk was easily my favorite character. I agree that some of the worst wounds are in our hearts, minds, and souls.
Page 128: "At our age, there's not much that doesn't look better covered up."
This made me giggle. They're talking about a fellow senior citizen who was out on a boat in a red bikini.
Page 132: I'd have to say I'm the happiest right now. Good food. Good company. Exceptional cat. No more hard decisions to make. No more wondering how it's all gonna turn out. I'm telling you what, youth is overrated. It's nothing but a fishbowl full of question marks. You dive in and start pitchin' 'em over the side one by one as you find the answers, till one day you realize you've finally tossed enough of 'em to see out. I like the clear view from here."
Coco is answering a question from the "Confessions" parlor game book from the 1800s. I like her perspective on now being her happiest time.
Page 162: "I've not been given all the answers, Edie. I would never claim otherwise. But I do know that people can create some impossible choices for themselves because their knowledge is based on what they see or have seen - even what they feel and what they want to believe - but they don't realize how limited their vision is."
Jason was a fairly creepy character to me initially. The way he just showed up, gazed into people's eyes as though he could see their souls, etc. But by the end of the book, his identity is pretty much laid out clearly. I'm not sure about the author's choices with this character . . . I kept picturing the actor from Lucifer, which is probably why I was creeped out.
Page 182-3 . . . there's a lot about the light on the island, the large white pelican, not understanding everything, etc. I thought about putting an image of the pages here, but nah.
Page 193: "Still, I did what I could. Put a hatchet in the attic so we could cut a hole in the roof in case the floods stayed low enough for us to climb up on the roof and stay out of it. Filled up the bathtub with water. Put bat'ries in all the flashlights. Drug Cecil's bass boat around by the front porch and tied it to a post there. Used a long rope so it could rise with the water. Fried some fish for supper."
Never having experienced a hurricane personally, I'm always baffled by people who ignore evacuation warnings. But I suppose if you've weathered one and don't have a safe place to evacuate to (or the money for a hotel room), it's easy to think you can just hunker down. It sounds pretty awful to me. In this scene, Edie is interviewing Camille survivor Nora Gilliam.
Page 222: "Bringing joy and beauty into the world should be enough if that's where your gifts lie. Whatever anybody's gifts are - that's enough. We're enough."
More of Punk's wisdom.
I decided not to blog any more of my post-its. I loved the talk about Grace. God is good!