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Any Bitter Thing by Monica Wood
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Any Bitter Thing: A Novel

by Monica Wood

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2251125,854 (4)7
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Ballantine Books (2006), Paperback, 368 pages

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Lizzy loses her parents at age two, and goes to live with her Uncle Mike, a priest. Though an unusual arrangement, it's one that fulfills the need for family for both Lizzy and her Uncle.
Father Mike is loving and caring parent, and is busy with his parishioners and local families.
When their nosy housekeeper mistakenly thinks she Lizzy in Mike's bed, she reports it as molestation and Lizzy loses her family once again.
Part family story, part murder mystery, the plot takes us through Lizzy's life and her reconnection with her past. ( )
  robertainez | Aug 22, 2009 |
Monica Wood never disappoints. Her easy prose serves her difficult issues extremely well, and while we may be lulled into a sense of security that we really know what's going on, Ms. Wood slyly pitches us a surprise curve at which we swing and miss every time.

Lizzy is orphaned very early in life and her uncle, a Catholic priest, takes over custody and raises the little girl while also tending to his parishoners. The resentful busybody of a housekeeper thinks she sees something untoward, and Father Mike must go away and never see Lizzy again. One thing I really love about this book is that a child services counselor, in her determination to find something wrong, is one of the villainesses.

I think I prefer "My Only Story" among Ms. Wood's work; but as I say, Ms. Wood never disappoints. She deals with issues arising from family crises supremely well. Her characters, major and minor, are full, understandable, and well-shaded. She reliably rewards her readers, and I look forward to getting through all her work. ( )
  LukeS | Apr 14, 2009 |
One of my top reads this year. A poignant story, with well developed characters, and a plot line that has you sitting on the edge of the chair, convinced that something is not being said. The ending doesn't disappoint.

Essentially this is the story of a woman, orphaned at age 2, raised by her uncle, who happened to be a priest, and their subsequent loss of each other. Her adult quest to fit together missing pieces of her life is extraordinarily written..it could so easily have become a daytime soap, but isn't. Rather it is a quiet, believable, compelling story that makes it my first 'couldn't put it down' of the year. ( )
3 vote tututhefirst | Mar 16, 2009 |
The novel starts with Lizzy's accident, a hit and run, she mentions it is her memory. Then we go back in time to when she went to live with her uncle, Father Mike. The novel is written in the past, switching from Lizzy's childhood and her recent memories after her accident. It also takes us back to Lizzy's childhood to Father Mike's point of view, but told in the third person. All this moving back and forth and from person to person may sound confusing, but it is done very skillfully and seamlessly, you are not really jumping around, just kind of flowing with the movement. As Lizzy moves toward the truth, there are some twists and surprises, one that I did not expect at all, yet it all seemed to fit. I enjoyed this book and recommend it.
1 vote SuziR | Dec 19, 2008 |
This book is beautifully written. After her accident, the main character has to try to piece together the puzzle of her life, including things that she never examined very closely. The book has real tragedy in it, and many adults that had no idea what to do with a child in her situation. Reading the story as it unfolds is like opening a very special gift. I highly recommend it. ( )
  PermaSwooned | Jun 26, 2008 |
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Epigraph
The full soul tramples upon the honeycomb,

but the hungry soul, any bitter thing tastes sweet.

--Proverbs 27:7
Dedication
in loving memory of Father Bob
First words
Despite its abrupt arrival, my accident felt anticipated after the fact, like a long-delayed package arriving as a thwup on the doorstep.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0345477685, Paperback)

After surviving a near-fatal accident, thirty-year-old Lizzy Mitchell faces a long road to recovery. She remembers little about the days she spent in and out of consciousness, save for one thing: She saw her beloved deceased uncle, Father Mike, the man who raised her in the rectory of his Maine church until she was nine, at which time she was abruptly sent away to boarding school. Was Father Mike an angel, a messenger from the beyond, or something more corporeal? Though her troubled marriage and her broken body need tending, Lizzy knows she must uncover the details of her accident–and delve deep into events of twenty years before, when whispers and accusations forced a good man to give up the only family he had. With deft insight into the snares of the human heart, Monica Wood has written an intimate and emotionally expansive novel full of understanding and hope.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:52 -0400)

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