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Life in Defiance (Defiance, Texas Trilogy, Book 3)

by Mary E. DeMuth

Series: Defiance, Texas (3)

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374665,412 (3.58)None
In a town she personifies, Ouisie Pepper wrestles with her own defiance. Desperate to become the wife and mother her husband Hap demands, Ouisie pours over a simple book about womanhood, constantly falling short, but determined to improve. Through all that self-improvement, Ouisie carries a terrible secret: she knows who killed Daisy Chance. As her children inch closer to uncovering the killer's identity and Hap's rages roar louder and become increasingly violent, Ouisie has to make a decision. Will she protect her children by telling her secret? Or will Hap's violence silence them all? Set on the backdrop of Defiance, Texas, Ouisie's journey typifies the choices we all face--whether to tell the truth about secrets and fight for the truth or bury them forever and live with the violent consequences.… (more)
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Showing 4 of 4
I thought thisnbook was the best in the series. The characters in the series were all flawed. There was a real tension throughout the book wondering how it would all fall out. ( )
  hazel1123 | Feb 5, 2011 |
I love the Defiance Texas Trilogy (also includes Daisy Chain and A Slow Burn) and I've been waiting impatiently since October to read Life In Defiance.And I feel...eh.I thought this book dragged a bit...a little too much about Ouisie. I realize this story was told from her point of view and that became important at the end, but there was so much going on with her that it became overwhelming.And the revelation of Daisy's killer...seriously?! Not even close to who I thought it was, nor was this person EVER on my radar. Anti-climactic, in my opinion.My favorite part? Hap getting his due. I'm still smiling over that.Overall, not my favorite book in the trilogy. I'm a bit disappointed, considering this was the final installment. However, it was still a good read and if you've read Daisy Chain and A Slow Burn you just have to read Life In Defiance to see how it all shakes out. ( )
  ldrumm16 | Dec 3, 2010 |
I loved the book Daisy Chain. This third book in the series does not flow as well as the first book. While the first book is told by Jed, a young boy who was in love with Daisy; this book is told by his mother, Louise. I find myself thinking, "Whine, whine, whine...get on with it already." ( )
  wearylibrarian | Jul 6, 2010 |
In Defiance, Texas, Ouisie Pepper seeks a perfect world. She’s the pastor’s wife. How could she be defiant? And yet, she defies her husband and the hunters of Daisy Chance’s killer, keeping secrets that could change the lives of all the people around her. Ouisie knows the pastor is not the all powerful, all knowing, all kind and generous leader he’s believed to be. She knows Daisy’s killer still lurks close by. She knows her son and daughter deserve a better life. And she knows she shouldn’t drink. But sometimes the drinking is all that seems to hold her together.

Ouisie Pepper sets out to improve her marriage with the aid of a sweetly religious self-help book. And the author, Mary E DeMuth, brings Ouisie, self-help author Sheba Nelson, bereaved mother Emory Chance, and a host of other characters to vivid life, all through Ouisie’s lonely clouded eyes.

I read A Slow Burn, second in Mary DeMuth’s Defiance Texas Trilogy, last year and really enjoyed it. There I saw through Emory’s eyes as she tried to piece together a life that was already fractured before her child was lost. There I met Ouisie, the discerning, oddly non-judgemental friend, with fascinating character flaws that I longed to learn more of. In Life in Defiance I finally get to know her well.

Ouisie wears her wounds well hidden, not just the wounds of a marriage that offers no safety, but those of a childhood too whose insecurities have molded her. Even when her husband doesn’t rage, the voice in her head still reminds her that she’s not perfect, not good enough. She walks round the lake drinking its peace while fearing to drown, and she can’t let go of the need to help herself as she struggles constantly to help others.

It’s not hard to empathize with Ouisie. Balancing love and duty, clinging helplessly to the hope that people change, meeting each challenge head-on and always standing right back up again, she tries so hard to control her world while she watches it spin on its heel.

The author has a deft hand with conversation, creating meetings where the reader feels so involved you almost want to speak your piece. She treats the presence of the divine with convincing realism too, never resorting to unbelievable “voices” but retaining the constant presence of another Voice in Ouisie’s mind. And she ties the threads of a complex tale through the lives of complex people, leading to a surprising and genuinely plausible, sorrowful conclusion.

I’ve still not read Daisy Chain, the first in the series. But it’s on order at the bookstore and I’ll read it soon. This series is one where you can genuinely start reading wherever you choose. But I’m sure you’ll grow to love the characters and long to know more, just as I have. In the process, perhaps you’ll learn more of yourself as well, and find healing for your own wounds or wisdom for your neighbors’. ( )
  SheilaDeeth | May 27, 2010 |
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In a town she personifies, Ouisie Pepper wrestles with her own defiance. Desperate to become the wife and mother her husband Hap demands, Ouisie pours over a simple book about womanhood, constantly falling short, but determined to improve. Through all that self-improvement, Ouisie carries a terrible secret: she knows who killed Daisy Chance. As her children inch closer to uncovering the killer's identity and Hap's rages roar louder and become increasingly violent, Ouisie has to make a decision. Will she protect her children by telling her secret? Or will Hap's violence silence them all? Set on the backdrop of Defiance, Texas, Ouisie's journey typifies the choices we all face--whether to tell the truth about secrets and fight for the truth or bury them forever and live with the violent consequences.

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