EVVIE DRAKE STARTS OVER
by
Linda Holmes
Evvie Drake Starts Over is the first
novel written by Linda Holmes, a correspondent for NPR. It is about Evvie, who
lives in Maine. She grew up in Calcasset; then, she and her high school
sweetheart, Tim, went to USC. Tim became a doctor, and they returned to Maine
and married. But, not all was happily ever after.
It is also
about Dean, a major league pitcher who developed the yips. Forced into an
untimely retirement, Dean needs to get away for awhile. So, he comes to Maine
and rents the apartment in Evvie’s house, a house that is now too big after
Tim’s untimely death.
Evvie and Dean appear to be normal,
albeit fortunate, people. Each may be a person whom many of us admire and
perhaps even envy. But, as Holmes chronicles their struggles with the adversity
that has confronted them and the battle to find a way to move forward, we see
that all is not as it appears.
The
characters in Evvie Drake Starts Over
are not the typical, “juicy” characters found in many novels. To many of us,
Evvie and Dean are not worthy of a book. They are seemingly normal; some might
even think that they are flat or boring characters. One interpretation of this
might be that this is simply a shortcoming in new novelist Holmes. But, in my
opinion, Holmes purposefully crafted her characters in this manner. Although we
all know many such normal-but-boring people, none of us truly knows what lies
behind this perceived normalcy. Once we peek, we just might be surprised by
what we find.
Some of the
early reviewers comment that Evvie Drake
Starts Over is a quick, easy read – that it is a charming or lovely
romance. I think these reviewers miss the point – as many miss, or overlook,
the richness of the Evvies and Deans in our lives. Holmes is spot on as she
portrays those in our modern society who appear one way, who are misunderstood,
and who get lost in the shuffle. Evvie
Drake Starts Over provides an interesting perspective about a segment of
our culture that is often overlooked or taken for granted. As Holmes reminds
us, all is not as it appears.
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