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I loved the language, the people, and the story. I'm not lying. It was definitely worth reading. She also finds support and friendship in her roommate Lou Ann, another new mother struggling to find her role in the world.
The story itself is interesting, and the characters--most notably Taylor Greer and her de facto daughter Turtle--are round and real. It is both elegant and engaging, and when I finished, I felt richer for having read it. She promises herself that she won't end up with a baby and that she'll make something of herself. Taylorville is also where she picks up Turtle, her baby.
Taylor and her newly acquired daughter finally light in Tucson. He got stuck up there." Marietta Greer leaves small town, Kentucky to escape the possibility of ending up like all her classmates: barefoot, pregnant, and trapped. She will be independent. Well, she ends up with someone else's baby, and the baby makes something of her. The Bean Trees is such a beautiful story.
A Cherokee woman hands the girl to Taylor; the woman says that the child is in danger and has already been hurt, and she can't care for her. So Taylor takes the baby--a responsibility she has no idea how to deal with--and continues on her trip. There, Taylor faces lessons she set out to escape: how to be a mother, how to be friends and accept friendship, how to be a family, and the importance of putting down roots. Taylor finds friends in unexpected places, including a local used tire shop, where serendipity leads her not only to new tires but to a job and a friend and mentor in the owner, Mattie. Marietta starts off by getting in her jalopy and heading west. The opening lines are memorable for their unexpected humor: "I have been afraid of putting air in a tire ever since I saw a tractor tire blow up and throw Newt Hardbine's father over the top of the Standard Oil Sign. When Taylor learns that she'll have to fight to keep Turtle--for whom she now feels like a true mother--Mattie, Lou Ann, and the others she's befriended in Tucson are by her side.
And she doesn't quite make independent; she has to learn that she has to depend on others sometimes, and she has to learn whom to depend on. On the trip, she changes her name to Taylor, after the town where she finally runs out of gas. The Bean Trees grabbed me from the first page, and kept me intrigued until the end.
This book was shipped to me quickly, mailing package in good shape and the book was a very interesting read. I will order more books from Amazon
I was surprised that the pages were not clean-cut at the outside edge. Perhaps the rough finish was supposed to justify the $17 paper-back price but I just found it a nuisance because it slowed down page turning. Only half way through the book. It's okay, easy reading and a sweet story but not nearly as interesting or complicated as The Poisonwood Bible by the same authoress.
2.The majority of men are stupid self-centered perverts who are completely useless. This book is truly awful. and 3. I cannot evenly remotely imagine why anyone would want to read this book or why they would enjoy it. Overall the book communicates three main messages: 1.The Unites States should open our borders and let anyone who wants to come, regardless of their background. America is full of and is run by a bunch of cold-hearted hypocrites. It eludes me how so much stupidity can be packed into one book.
Great story about a young girl on her way to find herself, and not only doing that but she finds a daughter,sister and love. Well done as usual, love the way Kingsolver writes. Reminds us to be much more considerate of others.
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