The Scent of Lilacs: A Family in 1964
Reviewed
by Lynda Ochsner
The
Scent of Lilacs, a new novel
by Ann H. Gabhart, looks at a family in
1964, in rural Kentucky. David Brooke
is a some-time pastor who also runs the local newspaper, while raising
his
13-year-old daughter Jocie. His wife ran
off several years ago to California,
taking their now 20-year-old daughter Tabitha. David’s
Aunt Love, and Wes, the newspaper pressman who
tells Jocie he’s
from Jupiter, provide an extended family.
Tabitha
soon arrives home,
and life at the Brooke home is never the same, as various family
secrets are
revealed. The story is told from the
alternating perspectives of David, Jocie, and Aunt Love, and along the
way we
learn more about tragic events in their past. Jocie
in particular matures, as she learns to appreciate
Aunt Love, who
she always resented for her scripture-quoting discipline, and learns
more about
her family. Serious moral issues are
brought forth, including out-of-wedlock children, adultery, and child
abandonment. Yet throughout all the
troubles, The Scent of Lilacs is told
in a light-hearted way, with interesting, likeable characters in their
ordinary
lives in a small town.
With
its more recent setting, The Scent of Lilacs has more
of a
nostalgic than historical feel, as a story that could happen today as
well as
then. The characters, and their
relationships with each other, are more central than the background
time
period. Most importantly, the
characters’ Christian faith brings them closer together through the
experiences
of the summer of ’64.
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