![]() ![]() In particular, Bean’s relationship with Henry is a compassionate, realistic portrayal of a sustaining, loving friendship. ![]() Yet the substantial revelations that occur over the course of this brief novel are, in the end, less compelling than the smaller moments that define the constantly shifting relationships that form the foundation of Bean’s life. ![]() In Jo Knowles’ latest novel, little is as it seems in the novel’s first pages. As she starts to ask questions-and get some unwelcome answers-Bean starts to feel like her life is becoming one giant soap opera. She can’t understand her mother’s celebratory attitude, the constant presence of her mom’s best friend or her own feelings of anger and loss, not to mention her increasingly complicated feelings about Henry. When Gus dies unexpectedly, Bean fears that she’s the only one who truly loved her grandfather. Bean’s mom, who was 15 herself when she had Bean, is an unhappy waitress, spending her nights drinking too much, fighting with Bean’s grandfather Gus and making Bean feel guilty for having been born. Henry’s mom-who watches soap operas religiously-is obese and agoraphobic, afraid to leave the house since Henry’s father disappeared. Bean and Henry are both misfits, united by their absent fathers and weird mothers. Fifteen-year-old Pearl (known to all as Bean) and her best friend Henry spend afternoons watching “Days of Our Lives” at Henry’s house. ![]()
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