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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Kay Shines in New Novel
Terry Kay may be best known for his wonderful novel, TO DANCE WITH THE WHITE DOG, but he outdoes himself in this spellbinding tale of love lost and found at the beginning of the 20th century. The novel is so rich in characters and plot that it would be difficult to summarize either without falling short of the dimensions he's created on both counts. In Lottie Lanier, he...
Published on September 23, 2000

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3.0 out of 5 stars Not up to Kay's potential
I found the first half of Kay's novel reminiscent of To Dance With the White Dog. Reading that book is what brought me to Taking Lottie Home. But, I was disappointed overall. At about the halfway point, the story seemed to take a left turn into soap opera-land. It was as though written by two different people. ... I thought it a shame the promise of the beginning wasn't...
Published on July 25, 2003 by Jim R. Coplen


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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Kay Shines in New Novel, September 23, 2000
By A Customer
Terry Kay may be best known for his wonderful novel, TO DANCE WITH THE WHITE DOG, but he outdoes himself in this spellbinding tale of love lost and found at the beginning of the 20th century. The novel is so rich in characters and plot that it would be difficult to summarize either without falling short of the dimensions he's created on both counts. In Lottie Lanier, he has discovered a girl/woman for the ages, a character at times so simple, yet at others, complex, mysterious, and so downright appealing, you literally feel like she's in the room beside you as you continue reading. For anyone who has ever been in or out of love at any time in one's life, TAKING LOTTIE HOME is one novel you will read, cherish, and most importantly, never forget. Cry, laugh, cheer, but do not miss this one!
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Story About Life, December 15, 2000
I just finished "Taking Lottie Home." While reading the book, I kept thinking that it was a good book but not a great book. Then I read the epilogue. At that point, the book became the great book. When a writer can write and make his reader feel the joy and pain of life as it really is, then he has risen to the top of the craft. He becomes like Hemingway or Steinbeck. Terry Kay has done that with "Taking Lottie Home." As I read this book I hurt and I laughed. And when I finished it, I was affected. Terry Kay wrote in the front of my book (I bought it at a book signing) that he hoped that the story mattered. Mr. Kay, the story mattered. Thanks.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Beautiful Story, March 10, 2001
This was my first Terry Kay novel and now I am going to run, not walk, to my Library in hopes that it will have all the rest of his works. I will not waste space summarizing the story as other reviewers have done a super job but I do want to say that there is something wrong with Oprah's opinion if she or whoever selects her book of the month if this one isn't selected in the very near future. I have read most of "her" selections and this is better than many of them. Another good one for those who like Southern settings is Home Across the Road by Nancy Peacock.

I really hated for this one to end and would love a sequel based on what really happened to Lottie and her life after this one.

Mr. Kay, where have you been all my life?????

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Unforgettable Lottie, October 19, 2000
Seldom, if ever, has a character captured and held me as Lottie Lanier did in this book. Not a common person, but both simple and complex, dull and interesting. Terry Kay has managed allow the reader to follow and care about her journey home and to grieve and worry about the end. I laid the book aside for almost two weeks for two reasons: First, I didn't want the words to end, and second, I couldn't possibly see how it could end well. It is a wonderful and unusual love story as only Terry Kay can write.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Take a sentimental journey with Lottie and her friends., February 7, 2001
The first book I read by Terry Kay was Shadow Song followed by To Dance with the White Dog which also became a wonderful television production a few years ago. Now with his latest book, Taking Lottie Home, Mr. Kay capitaves his reading audience with a sentimental tale which not only evokes a different era but wholesome and well meaning characters with the very best of values.

On a train home, two men recently discharged from a minor baseball team meet Lottie, a young woman with a questionable past. Ben returns home to his mother while Foster marries Lottie and they have a son and a good marraige. When Foster dies, though, it wa shis wish that Ben accompany Lottie home to her family to continue raising their son. But Lotties family and home life isn't conducive to raising a child so she returns to Ben's hometown where she spends time living with Ben's mother and also meets Ben's future father-in-law. And in a stunning turn of events, Lottie leaves these people who truly care about her but not before she also leaves a part of herself with them.

This is a wonderful book which will intoduce you to some fine characters you would be proud to call friends if they lived in your town.

Enjoy!!!!

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing book, May 25, 2004
At first I didn't like this book. I picked it up and thought, oh great, it's about baseball. How wrong was I when I picked this one up at a bookstore? So I put it down. A few days later, after finding myself at loose ends because nothing I picked up sounded good, I gave it a try again. And this time, I was hooked. Terry Kay's writing just ensared me and I couldn't put the book down till the last page was turned.

Kay's characters just came alive in this book ~~ their dreams, their passions, their loves and fears. This is an wonderful book that will haunt you with its lyrical writing and true characters. There is Ben who is kicked off the Augusta baseball team at the same time as Foster Lanier, an older baseball player. They meet up again on the way home from the baseball fields. Ben struggles to make a life again in his hometown, Jericho, as he struggles with ending his dreams of playing baseball. Throughout his life, he kept track of his best friend Milo who did remain behind to play ball and eventually played for Boston Red Sox. Then there is Lottie, the woman he meets on his journey home ~~ and he continues to meet her over the years. And this is their story ~~ of friendship and eventually taking Lottie home. Foster married Lottie and fathered her son, but Ben took her home.

It's an enchanting story of the deep South at the beginning of the 20th century. These characters are just as real as your grandparents were ~~ and very interesting too. It's a great book to read on a lazy day swinging on the hammock ~~ just be prepared with lemonade and cookies ~~ once you start reading this book, you don't want it to stop!

5-25-04

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Taking Lottie Home, October 19, 2000
By 
Debra L. Cowhick (Littleton, Co USA) - See all my reviews
I have been a long time fan of Terry Kay. From the time I read "To dance with the White Dog" to "The Year the lights came on" I knew I would never tire of Terry Kay's stories. "Bringing Lottie Home" has hit the top of the charts with me and all my friends! I would recommend this book to anyone, young and old!.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Hauntingly Beautiful, July 11, 2004
By 
Larry Hand (Woodstock, GA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Some books, as well as characters, can haunt you for days, maybe years, after the reading is done. "Taking Lottie Home" is such a book. And Lottie Lanier is just such a character: part girl, part woman, and all too giving, with eyes no one ever forgets. So, too, is the character Ben Phelps, the young would-be dream-catcher, who catches the ball but only worships the dream, living it vicariously through the faraway exploits of the intangible, aloof Milo Wade. And there's Foster Lanier, who tastes the dream, only to see it turn bitter before finding his final, brief comfort in the arms of Lottie. Then there is Arthur Ledford, a lonely, tormented, fair but angry man, whose role in Lottie's life turns out to be nearly as surprising as Lottie herself. Even the minor characters are hard to forget: Ben's mother, Margaret Phelps, who clings to Lottie's child, little Ben; Ben's fiancee, Sally, who sees Lottie as the greatest threat to her happiness; Arthur's wife, Alice, a cold, hateful woman who seems to believe all women should be miserable by nature; Coleman Maxey, a pain-in-the-butt redneck troublemaker, and an assortment of other town characters who are either enthralled by Lottie or unnerved by her. There is also the strangest alliance of carnival bad guys ever to appear in a Kay novel: a one-armed giant and a midget. Lottie's story takes place in early 1900's Georgia and Kentucky, when it was still the train that took people to faraway places. It, too, could be considered a character in this story, as could the town of Jerico, which sounds a lot like long ago Royston, Georgia, just as Milo Wade sounds a lot like the baseball great Ty Cobb.

Two great contemporary Southern writers are Terry Kay and Pat Conroy. It struck me, while reading this book, that the two men are interesting contrasts, especially regarding the way they write about the South. It reminds me of two men I once heard trying to describe the taste of a persimmon. Both liked the taste, but one said it was bitter, with a little sweet in it; the other said it was more sweet than bitter. For bittersweet stories about the South, it's hard to beat Conroy or Kay. And "Taking Lottie Home" is a sweet story, with just the right amount of bitter. It's the kind of story that stays with you for a long, long time.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Didn't want it to end, October 6, 2000
Taking Lottie Home captured me from the beginning and consumed me for days. I could hardly bear for it to end and then it ended so wondefully. I'm reading it for the second time, still finding it to be as fine as I remembered.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful, warm book, October 18, 2000
By 
"mweir97" (Vernon Hills, IL USA) - See all my reviews
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. Ben and Lottie were such great characters. I really liked them. It's so interesting as this book leads us through their lives and how they intertwine with each other through the years. Very good book. I highly recommend it.
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Taking Lottie Home
Taking Lottie Home by Terry Kay (Hardcover - Apr. 2001)
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