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The Wonder Boy of Whistle Stop
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Has everyone reading this book already read Fried Green Tomatoes? I am wondering how this works if you are not familiar with the earlier book and would love to hear from anyone who did not read the first volume.
I am finding that this rests heavily on Fried Green Tomatoes. If I did not know the characters from just having finished Fried Green Tomatoes 2 months ago, I am not sure I would feel like I know them here. I don't think there is as much character development in this book. Those characters who are new here, young Ruth and her family, some of the folks at the retirement home, etc, feel like caricatures. Ruth's mother in-law and her daughter Caroline, are just the steriotype of the materialistic, socially conscious mean rich ladies. They are not real people. The same thing can be said of the director of the retirement home. I also find the repetition of stories from Fried Green Tomatoes unnecessary, but then I just read that. If I had read it when it first came out, I might appreciate these triggers for my memory.
I am not liking this as much as Fried Green Tomatoes. It does not seem as believable. But, that might be a prejudice of mine to generally like the first book in a series and be more critical of subsequent volumes. So, I am anxious to read what others think.dire


I am tired of overwritten books like AA Little Life and The Hummingbird's Daughter.
It is nice to have some clean writing without poetic descriptions. I enjoy a sweet story.






I want more like this one. I am tired of things that have no hope written into them. I am tired of books trying to be clever by adding so much description that the story suffers. Humming Bird's daughter had a story but the book suffered because of all the description. If I wanted that type of read I would pick up a book of poetry


I didn't mind the sweetness and the super crazy coincidences in this book. It's not my favourite thing but once in a while it's nice to read something like that.
The issue for me is that I think I needed to have read Fried Green Tomatoes which I haven't. I saw the film years ago but don't really remember it (I do remember I liked it!). So for me this book was really frustrating because there was no depth to the characters at all. Aside from Buddy and in the second half of the book his daughter, Ruthie, all the other characters just came and went and you didn't really know anything or much about them. I suppose if I'd read FGT I maybe would've known more. I was getting annoyed because I would be reading about one character and getting interested in their story and then it would jump to someone else and 30 years back or forward in time. By the time the book came back to the character I was interested in, I'd forgotten about them and didn't really care. This was also just as well because when it came back to them it was another time period and talking about something different.
After the second half of the book, the story more consistently came back to Buddy and his daughter and I enjoyed that part more.




Books mentioned in this topic
The Hummingbird's Daughter (other topics)A Little Life (other topics)
The Wonder Boy of Whistle Stop (other topics)
The Wonder Boy of Whistle Stop
We officially start this read on Jan 1.