Whistling Past the Graveyard by Susan Crandall Narrated by, Amy
Rubinate
I truly enjoyed this book, my favorite character was Eula,
there were times Starla would get on my nerves and you just wanted to shake
her, but she was young & naïve, abandoned by her mother, raised by a
grandmother who is much tougher on her than anyone realizes. She is a sassy
little thing and has this idealized idea of her mother who she thinks is a big
star in Nashville plus a father who works out on an oil rig and doesn’t come
home very often. When Starla gets into trouble she runs away from her Grandmother
Mamie’s home to be with her mother, but things don’t go as smoothly as Starla
thinks, she is picked up by a black woman, Eula, who is traveling with of all
things a white baby (remember this is 1963) Eula promises she will get her to Nashville
but they need to stop at her house first and Eula’s husband is none too happy
to have two white children in his home, this is when things get a might
complicated for Starla & Eula.
The friendship between Eula & Starla is sweet and I
loved how much they each learned from each other even when they didn’t realize
it, Starla’s eyes were opened to what goes on in the world outside of her
little Mississippi town where the only “coloreds” she knows are the help for
the rich people in town, but what I liked was with Starla’s naïveté she doesn’t
judge Eula on the color of her skin just by her deeds and the size of her
heart.
This is a road trip book and these two are on a doozy, and
it seems like what could go wrong did go wrong, plus they have a white baby named
James along for the ride (again I remind you these 3 are traveling from
Mississippi to Nashville in 1963) so you can guess what some of the trouble
they run into is. I don’t want to give too much away but let’s just say Starla’s
daddy hasn’t been all that honest with her about her mamma. As I said before
there are times when Starla’s “red rage” (as she calls it) get her into more
trouble than she needed to be in and there were times I just wanted to yell
Starla NOOOO, but what fun would that book have been?
Amy Rubinate narrates this one and does a great job she
sounds like a young girl when narrating Starla and when narrating Eula she is
an African-American woman, it is almost like two different people are narrating
but it is only the very talented Rubinate each character has their own voice
and there was never any trouble knowing who was talking. Highly recommend
reading this one on audio!
I highly recommend this book, if you are a fan of Saving
CeeCee Honeycutt and/or Calling Me Home I would say get this book right now!
5 Stars
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