![]() ![]() But she tells her story with verve and instills in her characters realistic qualities to which readers will respond. ![]() Cooney sometimes second-guesses herself, introducing and retracting plot threads, not always to dramatic effect. newborn babies on the radio, it makes her wonder about her family. Instead, she discovers the value of cousins and of imperfect family members, and witnesses her father's own coming to terms with his roots. Lives are in the balance in bestselling author Caroline B. Afraid that she's about to meet her father's son by another woman, Shelley goes to the reunion full of expectations that mostly remain unfulfilled. Her father is on a business trip and her older sister is in Paris with their mother and stepfather. Shelley, her stepmother and embarrassingly obnoxious younger brother set off for a family reunion (with the ``perfect family'') in Iowa. One can see where Cooney's story is going from its early pages: Shelley, who has been through her parents' divorce and their subsequent remarriages views another, non-divorced family as perfect, before discovering that no one configuration of people means ``family.'' But nothing else about the book is predictable. ![]()
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