(3/23/2024)
Based on an actual dance hall explosion in Possum Flats, a small Missouri town, era 1928, "The Flower Sisters" explores the impact of such an event on its three main characters. The book is told through the eyes of one of the twin sisters, Violet and Rose, her playboy turned fundamentalist minister date, Dash, and her 15-year-old granddaughter, Daisy. Anxious to with travel her man to California, the granddaughter is plonked in this small town by her hippie mother. One problem however, Daisy has never met her grandmother. Bored and miserable, this high school student obtains an internship at the local newspaper. While assigned to the paper's morgue detail, Daisy begins her investigation and writes detailed articles about what really happened that night of the explosion. While Daisy's findings shocked the town, this reader found it hard to believe that she could author such a profound expose of this event.
This easy-to-read book is filled with well-developed characters, each revealing their story in alternating chapters. Often people in this small sleepy town have different views and are not always what they appeared to be. Since the author dropped several hints earlier in the pages of her book, the story's twists were not a surprise to this reader. This not only is this book a story of secrets and regrets, but it's about finding the truth, your family and most of all that place called home. I think second paragraph from page 333 says it all. It begins with, "Maybe home is something you can't run from, a place you find yourself searching for even after you think you've gotten away. . . (Spend a moment or two to reread it and see if you agree)