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Bingo by Rita Mae Brown
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Well, the Hunsenmeir sister (Louise and Julia ) did it again! Part two of the tale of two sisters living in Runnymade, a town split apart by the Mason - Dixon Line. Much older but none the wiser, these two 'funny old birds' still need a referee to keep them from catfighting.
As usual, Nickel (Julia's daughter) is trying to keep these two out of each others hair and out oft her social live - which is practically nonexistend, since she's an acclaimed lesbian and in Runnymade that's about as sinful as it get get.... Bingo is the sequel of my all time favourite 'Six of One'.
Six of one ( )
  tealover | Aug 26, 2007 |
The queens of contention are the octogenarian Hunsenmeir sisters (introduced in Six of One ), who slug it out with repartee and second-childhood antics when both fall in love with visiting widower Ed Tutweiler Walters. Nickel Smith, daughter and niece of the Hunsenmeir sisters, has reached her late 30s with well-defined roles in the community: as a respected journalist for the Clarion and as a tacitly accepted (read discreet) lesbian. But Nickel's history comes unraveled when she falls into an affair with her best friend's husband, and the newspaper is sold to big-money interests. Along with sketches of zany homegrown characters, Brown offers unpredictable plot resolutions that reinforce her reputation as a writer unafraid of new directions. Similar to, although not as much fun as, Six of One , this is vintage Brown nevertheless. ( )
  latinobookgeek | Apr 3, 2007 |
Sequel to Six of One. Highly recommended. Six of One is probably on my top ten books of all time and I loved this return to the characters. ( )
  shelley582 | Mar 21, 2007 |
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Rita Mae Brown

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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 055305306X, Hardcover)

The acclaimed author of Rubyfruit Jungle and Six Of One retums to Runnymede, Maryland, for an outrageous, poignant, and surprising story of passion, rivalry, and small-town fun.  Straddling the Mason-Dixon Line since before the Civil War is Runnymede.  And it seems that ever since then, most people in the town have been inherently split:  between good and bad, or love and sex, or male and female, or politics and sobriety.  Nicole ("Nickel") Smith is in such a dilemma herself--here she is, an avowed lesbian, having an affair that would shock Runnymede as much as it shocks Nickel herself.  And her work seems to be going to the dogs, too, when the beloved newspaper where she is an editor is put up for sale.  Thank goodness the weekly bingo games still go on, though Nickel is a little weary of playing referee there for the flamboyant Hunsenmeir sisters, Louise and Julia.  Nickel's momma, who is now pushing ninety but clawing like cats over handsome newcomer Ed Tutweiler Walters.  A parade of townsfolk and kin weave their colorful way through the trials, tribulations, and ultimate triumphs of our heroines, in this spirited novel of the South that appeals as much to the funny bone as to the heart.


From the Paperback edition.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:16 -0400)

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