I picked up 'Worthy's Town' at the local library as, based on the reviews, I was hoping for an experience along the lines of 'Rush Home Road'. Small town setting, connected characters, historical novel. Unfortunately, I found the writing style to be somewhat juvenile and there were times (especially when reading Cap's journalistic attempts for the local newspaper) when I felt like I was reading a novel written for a teen audience. That being said, the book seemed to vacillate between a teen novel and suddenly, when the author realized it was a little too simplistic, she interjected sex scenes to startle you. I am not in any way against (good, well-written) sex scenes in a novel, but in every single one in 'Worthy's Town' one character was manipulating the other in often perverse ways (sex scenes of child molestation, another of an adult in a position of power having oral sex with a somewhat 'slow' young man). There was not one single scene of love or respect or even just mutual desire between the characters. And if you want to know about penises, the author creates characters that seem to be fixated on them, from the experimentation between Cappy and his friend, Beany, to the undertaker checking out the men's penises while embalming bodies. The book itself almost gave me the sense that an editor said, 'well to keep this interesting, we need to add something that the readers wouldn't expect, something a little dark, a little taboo.' Hard to categorize this book other than 'hmmmm'.