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Book Review:
Hearts in Hiding by
Betsy Brannon Green
Reviewed by Jennie L Hansen
Once in awhile
a new writer comes along with a voice so refreshing it’s easy to
forget to look for the usual “first timer” mistakes. Betsy Brannon
Green is that kind of writer. Other writers mix romance, mystery,
and even humor and do it well, but Sister Green adds a new twist.
She’s a Southern writer, writing true Southern “regional” fiction
with LDS characters and LDS dilemmas. Her fiction is set in the
small town of Haggerty, Georgiapopulation 6,000a fictional
town much like the small southern town where Sister Green, and her
father before her, spent much of their youth.
Southern
Stereotypes
There’s a tendency in fiction to stereotype small town Southerners
as toothpick chewing, illiterate hillbillies, but Sister Green introduces
readers to an intelligent, charming set of characters who show their
concern for one another in their own uniquely Southern style. Her
main character, Kate Singleton, is a young, tired, pregnant widow
working in a no-future position for a Chicago law firm. By the fourth
paragraph we also know she’s being followed, and she’s not particularly
surprised by this turn of events. Shortly after, we learn she’s
smart enough to avoid unnecessary risks, that it’s FBI agents who
are following her, and that her deceased husband was an agent killed
in the line of duty. The story’s pace is fast at this point as she
discovers her life has been threatened, and that she’s about to
become a different person with a different life. This new life will
include a new husband, undercover agent Mark, a man she’d never
even seen until an hour before they married.
Friendly
Neighbors
With that different life comes a slower pace, both in her lifestyle
and in the community where she and her new husband assume their
new life and identities. Technically, the pace of the story slows
too, but at that point I was having such a good time meeting Kate
and Mark’s neighbors, I didn’t care. There’s Miss Eugenia, right
next door, who takes over managing the renovation of the old house
they’ve moved into, arranging Kate’s social life and keeping Kate
abreast of the strict social mores of a Haggerty household. Miss
Polly, next door on the other side, knows everything there is to
know about Southern cooking, the neighbors and all those people
living out on Highway 11. From Miss Eugenia and Miss Polly we learn
that certain indiscretions can be overlooked, but late thank you
notes are the true unforgivable sin and that it’s not Hallmark cards,
but casseroles that are the correct medium for expressing love and
concern at each of life’s mileposts.
Miss Polly shrugged
elegantly. “All I know is that I never received a thank-you note
from them for the
china dinner
plate I gave them as a wedding gift.”
“How long has
it been since the wedding?” someone asked.
“Six or seven
months, I think.” Miss Polly answered, placing her cards face up
on the table.
There was a
universal gasp. “Oh my,” the lady on the other side of Miss Eugenia
spoke for everyone.
Kate looked
at her neighbor in confusion. “Failing to write thank-you notes
is an unforgivable sin in the South,” Miss Eugenia explained.
“Only thing
worse is committing adultery with a close family member,” someone
else contributed.
“And that’s
only if you get caught!” a tiny woman wearing a black net hat added
from across the room.
“Thank-you notes
are what separate us from the barbarians,” Miss Polly said.
“She means the
Yankees,” Miss Eugenia whispered.
Ellis Harper
is another unforgettable Haggerty neighbor. He can build or repair
anything if given enough time and a regular meal every day. Hepsibah,
who prefers to be called Happy, can wheel and deal with the best
decorators, and she’s no slouch when it comes to using Kate’s newly
acquired credit cards.
As part of their
cover, Mark is the new police chief, a supposedly simple position
in a small, quiet town, but he finds the retired chief wants his
job back any way he can get it, and one of his two patrolmen suffers
from a severe bout of absenteeism. Kate cures his problems with
a few well-placed hints to a few of her delightfully, snoopy elderly
neighbors.
“He’s been to
the doctor twice in the last week, and he’s had to miss work, so
it must be bad.”
Everyone was
staring at her, waiting. “He said it was personal, something he
couldn’t discuss in front of ladies . . .”
All the old
women leaned forward with synchronized baited breath.
“So I can only
assume that it’s . . .”
“A male problem,”
Miss George Ann spoke for everyone. Kate shrugged eloquently and
Annabelle’s eyebrows shot up.
Mormons in Haggerty
In a town quite evenly divided between Baptists and Methodists,
Mormons are an oddity. Miss Eugenia with sincere loyalty defends Kate’s
religion to her gossipy neighbors, who have discovered that Mark wears
unusual underwear.
“There is nothing
wrong with the Chief’s blood. He’s just a Mormon, and they do all
kinds of odd things like wear long johns in the summer and save
buckets of food even though the Y2K crisis is over.”
Once Kate’s
baby is born the story takes off at a rocket pace. There’s murder,
kidnapping, and enough intrigue to keep the reader guessing right
to the end. The romance portion of the story is kept low key, but
it does raise some interesting questions about how to manage a secret
wedding and still make it a temple marriage.
Yes, the book
has some flaws: like the over use of ‘ly’ adverbs and ‘very’ gets
a little distracting, the slower pace after Kate and Mark first
arrive in Haggerty goes on a bit too long, and the killing of Kate’s
double is never adequately explained, since the villain knows all
along that the female agent isn’t really Kate, but those points
are easily overlooked because of the charm and intrigue that Sister
Green handles so well.
“Hearts in Hiding”
is a fun book to read. Meeting Sister Green’s characters alone make
the book worth reading, but unraveling the mystery surrounding Kate’s
first husband and the dangerous syndicate he was investigating provides
a well-developed plot as a bonus. It’s one of those books that is
hard to put down, so I wouldn’t recommend starting it if you don’t
have time to finish in one or two sittings.
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