(May) FYI: HarperPerennial will publish the paperback edition of Little Altars Everywhere, which won the Western States Book Award, in May. But while Wells's ambition is admirable and her talent undeniable, she never quite makes this difficult marriage work. Told through several narrative vehicles and traveling through space and time from Depression-era Louisiana to present-day Seattle, this novel attempts to wed a folksy homespun tale to a soul-searching examination of conscience. Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood (Signed & Inscribed) by Wells, Rebecca and a great selection of related books, art and collectibles available now at. While anecdotes about the Ya-Ya's (such as the riotous scene at a Shirley Temple look-alike contest) are often very amusing, the narrative is beset by superficial characterization and forced colloquialisms. From this artifact of Vivi's own lifelong friendship with three women collectively known as ""the Ya-Ya's,"" and from Sidda's response to it, a story unfolds regarding a dark period in Vivi and Sidda's past that plagues their present relationship. When Sidda asks her mother, the aging belle Vivi, for help in researching women's friendships, Vivi sends her daughter a scrapbook. 'You cant just set it down on the coffee table and walk away from it when it gets boring or you get tired.' The one thing Vivi Walker does not do is walk away from life. Carrying echoes of both Fannie Flagg and Pat Conroy, Wells's second novel continues the story of Siddalee Walker, introduced in Little Altars Everywhere (1992). 'Life is not a book,' says Vivi Walker, the heroine of LITTLE ALTARS EVERYWHERE and DIVINE SECRETS OF THE YA-YA SISTERHOOD.
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