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Loading... A Day Late and a Dollar Shortby Terry McMillan
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I thought it was an all right book but it was not one of my favorites by Terry McMillan. ( )A day late and a dollar short was a very good book because it reminded me a lot of my own family. Throughout this book, the father of four kids ends up diying and the kids and their mother can't figure out how to divide up the money and land he left for them. Throughout the process of dividing up the estates, the realise that there are some other illegitimate kids that their father/ex-husband had within the times that they were all together. This only adds even more drama because the son confesses to the family that he has a drug addiction and needs some money to go to rehab. This causes even more drama in the book. Even though this book is drama-filled, it also has its bits of comic-relief so the reader doesnt get too overwhelmed with drama. "A Day Late" was a sheer delight all the way through. It's the story of a family, mother and father and four kids, all adults now, and it's written in a very unique way, written in first person all the way through but changing the point of view with each chapter. A great way of allowing the reader insight into what makes each one of the characters tick. And what characters! This was an excellent book. The author creates some very human characters and does a wonderful job of keeping the reader interested in what happens to them. I totally enjoyed this book. no reviews | add a review
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She also has great dish about family dynamics. Have Cecil and Viola's kids got problems! When lovable, luck-free Lewis turns up to visit his mom, he's drunk, broke, and still whining about his ex, Donnetta, who "didn't have as much sense as a Christmas turkey" (though she did have the sense to dump Lewis). Now Lewis consoles himself with his Bobbing Betty doll. "How could somebody with an IQ of 146 be so stupid?" marvels Viola. And that Charlotte! Viola's daughter is "a bossy wench from the word go." (Gee, where could she have gotten that trait?) Charlotte feels like she never got her fair share of attention, having been born 10 months after the eldest daughter, Paris (now the driven mom of a brilliant athlete whose white girlfriend claims she's pregnant). Charlotte took it out on younger Lewis and Janelle, who's been in college 15 years with no degree in sight.
At first, you'll make ample use of the family charts in the endpapers to figure out who's who, but pretty soon you'll feel right at home with the squabbling, multiply dysfunctional, ultimately loving Price clan. You may agree with Viola: "Some folks got some stuff that can top ours. Hell, look at the Kennedys." --Tim Appelo
(retrieved from Amazon Wed, 06 Jan 2010 00:53:17 -0500)
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