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Nora, Nora

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Twelve-year-old Peyton McKenzie isn't ready to share her widowed father with anyone—certainly not with her cigarette-smoking redheaded cousin Nora, who just rolled into sleepy Lytton, Georgia, this summer behind the wheel of a pink Thunderbird. But her father seems to like Nora, and prim Aunt Augusta hates her, which means she can't be all bad. And when Nora takes a job teaching the first integrated honors class at the local high school, it appears she might be staying forever.

But there's something troubling Peyton's unorthodox cousin, something more than the outspoken town gossips' complaints about Nora's "unsouthern ways." When the truth comes to light, it will rock the segregated small community—and teach Peyton an unforgettable lesson about the enormous cost of love.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 31, 2000
      Siddons pulls off another smoothly written novel with ingratiating ease, despite an unpromising beginning. Readers may fear they're in the realm of the hackneyed reflections of To Kill a Mockingbird and A Member of the Wedding when they're introduced to 12-year-old, "thin, frail, queer and nervous" Peyton McKenzie. In the seventh grade in Lytton, Ga., Peyton has "no friends of her own age and gender," and spends her free time in the parsonage tool shed with 34-year-old Ernie Longworth, eccentric, erudite sexton and grave keeper of the Methodist church. The third member of their Losers Club is eight-year-old Boot, the handicapped grandson of Chloe, the McKenzies' black housekeeper. Peyton considers herself the consummate "loser" because her mother died the day after she was born, and her cool, distant father seems to hold Peyton responsible. When a beautiful red-haired stranger blows into town in a Thunderbird coup , this too seems tritely familiar. Outspoken Nora Findlay, a distant cousin who smokes, drinks and doesn't wear a bra, is clearly out to shock the morally conservative community. Though Siddons doesn't deliver any thematic surprises in this well-worn genre, she does offer a neatly competent and engrossing story that captures the reader's sympathies despite its quality of d j vu, as she conjures up the social and racial attitudes of a small Southern town in the 1960s. Nora enthralls an initially reluctant Peyton, working magic on the girl's appearance, self-confidence, intellectual curiosity and moral vision, even as she scandalizes everyone else in town. But daredevil Nora is secretly vulnerable, as Peyton learns when her cousin confesses the heavy emotional burden she carries. Eventually, both Nora and Peyton experience the anguish of betrayal. In addition to her impeccable re-creation of Southern speech and atmosphere, Siddons captures the angst of adolescence with practiced skill, and she handles the rising drama of her plot so smoothly that the book has all the marks of bestsellerdom. Agent, Jennifer Rudolph Walsh at the Writers Shop. 250,000 first printing; author tour.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      In the South of the 1950s, cousin Nora comes to Lytton bringing shocking new ideas such as eating with Negroes and teaching colored children to read and write well enough to have jobs other than as maids and fast food employees. She also brings the vibrant life and romantic color of Cuba and Miami into the lives of Peyton McKenzie and her widowed father. Cristine McMurdo-Wallis captures Southern speech and also summons the true horrors of growing up for Peyton, including budding breasts and the Loser's Club. She is whiny and caustic as the awful Aunt Augusta. Siddons followers will be more than pleased with this rendition. B.H.B. (c) AudioFile 2002, Portland, Maine
    • AudioFile Magazine
      Nora breezes into the sleepy Georgian town where her cousin Peyton and widowed uncle live. Nora's infectious energy stirs up everyone's lives for the better, but her secret past eventually comes back to haunt her. Debra Monk does a fine job of representing the staid citizens of Lytton, Georgia, while at the same time conveying Nora's vibrancy. In addition, Monk translates Peyton's initial wariness--and eventual acceptance--of her quirky cousin with real grace. The result is a humorous and poignant tale that Siddons's fans may consider her best yet. R.A.P. (c) AudioFile 2000, Portland, Maine

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