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12 Reviews
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
"Worthy's Town",
By A Customer
This review is from: Worthy's Town (Hardcover)
This is an interesting book about small town life starting in the early 1900's and ending after the second World War. The hero of the book is not so much Worthy as it is his grandson (who think he is his "pa")Cappy. Cappy grows up to use his god given talents and also to avenge the murder of his best friend...even though the murder is brought to justice in a very unconventional way. Good reading.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Going Home Almost,
By Sharon Loftus (Granite City,, Illinois United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Worthy's Town (Hardcover)
I read a review of this book in the St. Louis Post Dispatch and couldn't wait to order it. My G-Grandparents lived in Greene Co., Il. Their Name was Cotter and there is a Cotter named in the book. (Loved it) I never lived in Kane or Carrolton, but have visited and driven through there many times on the way to my Grandpa's in Scott County. The book was a refreshing visit to a familiar place.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Willa and Worthy raise their grandson,
By chasmagnolia (The Lowcountry...SC...USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Worthy's Town (Hardcover)
A story of family love and honesty. A story of the town's men standing around a potbelly wood heater at the general store. A story of friends made and friends kept. A story of town gossip. A story of a self-centered prankster and things going to far. A story of "you get what you deserve in the end". There is a lot of love between Worthy and his wife, Willa, in a chauvenistic kind of way....And I mean that in a sweet way. They raise their grandson, Cappy, not really knowing who Cappy's father is because W & W's unmarried, 14 year old daughter died shortly after childbirth from complications. Cappy grows up to be quite a fellow. He's ambitious, likeable, confident, and has tenacity. I strongly suggest reading this novel, it's one of the best I've read this year.The writing in this book is easy to follow and quick to read but real hard to put down. I am going to look up other books by this author and pray that she writes again real soon. She's done a greaT Job! I'm not sure why there are some reviewers who feel ashamed or offended, but this is a terrific book. This is not non-fiction and I've never been to Illinios, but I liked this little town very much and the characters in the story seem so real. I'm glad I read this book eventhough I almost didn't. I'm so sure that almost anyone would enjoy this novel.
5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Born in Greene County,
By A Customer
This review is from: Worthy's Town (Hardcover)
This is just the type of novel I love to read. I'm a history nut, and believe Rolens is completely accurate in her depiction of the times about which she wrote. Eventhough the "names" as used in the book sound familiar, they are representative only of the names used in that part of the state, and don't represent people I remember - exactly. How clever! I think this would make a great film. I sympathized with Willa. She epitomizes how society viewed women during this time. I'd buy another book from this author!
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very enjoyable book,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Worthy's Town (Hardcover)
This was a very easy book to read. The town was just like hundreds of others. Full of quirky characters & lots of gossip. I loved the authors style of writing. I especially loved the part where the grandmother started breastfeeding her grandbaby as if it were an everyday occurence. I highly recommend this book. You won't be disappointed & I anxiously await more from this author.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Rolens' "Worthy's Town" nicely parallels "Winesburg, Ohio",
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Worthy's Town: A Novel (Paperback)
Nearly a century ago, Sherwood Anderson shattered literary tradition with his iconoclastic portrait of small-town America in the throes of modernization. His "Winesburg, Ohio" dealt with themes traditionally associated with sophisticated urbanites: alienation, emotional isolation, loosened sexual restraints, emotional displacement and social corruption. Sharon Rolens' intriguing, enticing and immensely readable "Worthy's Town" deserves favorable comparison with Anderson's masterpiece. Whereas Anderson interjected philosophical considerations through his alter-ego, George Willard, Rolens permits her narrative to provoke thought; her protagonist, Cappy Gilberson, evolves within a social milieu which simultaneously restricts and liberates his growing intellectual independence. Both Anderson and Rolens, however, focus attention on a town, and the town becomes the focus of the novel, its characters advancing the evolution of the social organism.Cappy Gilberson, raised by his maternal grandmother and grandfather, comes of age in the Great Depression. His world reflects the verities of middle-American rural existence; death can be both sudden and cruel. His own mother, Chastity, dies after unsanitary handling by the local midwife. His grandfather, Worthy, believes in the power of the spoken word and the salubrious impact of storytelling. Cappy's natural intelligence and inquisitive nature absorb this willingness to exaggerate fact to prove a point; he becomes a brightly reluctant student whose own search for his father becomes a painful part of his childhood. Rolens introduces a variety of characters, all of whom advance the reader's growing awareness of the social structure of Old Kane, Illinois. Expressions of sexuality, from childhood experimentation to storefront braggaodocio, from cruel ostracism of presumed homosexuals to downright nasty innuendo, receive candid treatment. Rolens is at her best when Cappy needs to expand his own horizons; his dogged detemination to demonstrate independence finds resistance in his grandfather, his teacher and his newspaper editor. He learns of the fragility of friendships, of the enormous impact of sexual appetite and of the imperfect mechanisms of dispensing justice in an otherwise indifferent world. Since "Worthy's Town" has such a relaxed, conversational style, it may be easy to dismiss this novel as light reading. Yet, Sharon Rolens has encompassed genuine emotion, human growth and terrible hurt in this piercing work. Without our being aware, Old Kane, Illinois gradually evolves as a microcosm of a changing nation, interpreted through the eyes of a once-innocent, now maturing protagonist. In this sense, Ms. Rolens advances the literary insight initiated well before her own birth. Sherwood Anderson would heartily approve of "Worthy's Town."
4.0 out of 5 stars
The way it is in a Small Town,
This review is from: Worthy's Town: A Novel (Paperback)
I picked Worthy's Town to read because I'm an author writing about a small town in the south. My last novel, "Children of the Mountain" is set in the same time period. I was surprised to find there's not much differance in small towns, be in the north or south. The author did a great job and I was totaly captivated from the first page to the last. Loved Worthy's insight into the nature of people. At first I was put of by his treatment of his wife, but that's exactly the way men in the south are. If you can endure the top layer long enough to reach the true inter self of one of these type men, there is loyalty and love there that you'll never find elsewhere. A good quick read. Thanks, Eva McCall, Author of "Edge of Heaven" and the sequel, "Children of the Mountain".
5.0 out of 5 stars
I loved these characters and their very realistic town,
By Barbara "Queen of her castle AND her home lib... (beautiful Charleston, SC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Worthy's Town (Hardcover)
This is definitrly one of my new favorite novels. I bought this ... months ago. When I got home, looked up the title and read the reviews, I put off reading this book but I sure wish I didn't now that I read it. This story is excellent. Please Ms. Rolens, write some more. You're a terrific author!!The story is about family love.....unconditional love. The earl and mid 20th century is rich with history and this author ties history into this novel with expertise rolled up with suspense. There's the primitive childbirth practices which caused the death of 14 year old Chastity. Her baby boy, Cappy, being raised by his grandparents and the loved shared between them is heartwarming. And Worthy's love for Willa is so very obvious as well as Willa's love for him in return. There is everything in this book that is in real life. Some hate, some love, some patriotism, some strange personal endeavors, bullies and meaness. I belive almost anyone would like this book, I don't understand why anyone would be embarassed about a book of fiction. THIS IS A GREAT BOOK. Pick it up, read it, enjoy it, life isn't always picture perfect. This story was easy to follow and easy to get to know the characters. I highly recommend this one.
3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Former Central Illinois Resident,
By A Customer
This review is from: Worthy's Town (Hardcover)
This book is a wonderful account of days gone by in central Illinois. Life as depicted in this novel seems to be a "simpler" life; as so much of what we hear on the news or read in the papers today, would have been taboo in Cappy's time. I loved the authentic dialogue and all the characters portrayed in the book. This would make a great movie! I hope Ms. Rolens is planning a second book in the near future! Thank you for a thoroughly enjoyable novel.
3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Offended!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Worthy's Town (Hardcover)
I read this book and found it to be extremely offensive. Having been a resident of Greene County, I found the use of actual names of people I knew to be insulting and degrading. This book reads like the ramblings of a twelve year old boy.
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Worthy's Town by Sharon Rolens (Hardcover - October 1, 2000)
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