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Turnip Blues
Turnip Blues
Author: Helen Campbell
"As long as I've known her she's listened to Bessie Smith. Dances to that racket, arms akimbo, shaking her loose skin in rhythm. The music makes her dangerous. She knocks down the table lamps and drink coasters and Hummel figurines, then warbles along, top volume, as if the voice on the phonograph isn't noise enough... and now she's got this...  more »

Turnip Blues is a fresh version of the traditional "road" story -- featuring two plucky 75-year-old women, Mrs. Kuzo and Mrs. Lemack. As these two friends drive from Pittsburgh to Philadelphia to visit the grave of legendary blues-artist Bessie Smith, Mrs. Kuzo reflects on her life's journey, growing up in a dysfunctional "Hunkie" family: her immigrant mother, a schemer and a bootlegger, notorious for her easy virtue; sister Annie, who leaves the old neighborhood for "America," at great cost; brother Nicky, a sadistic war veteran; husband Al, simple but belligerent; and a larger, equally colorful cast of family members, coworkers, and neighbors. Behind them all looms the memory of Lily, Annie's twin, whose tragic death at a young age haunts the family through the years. When they arrive at their journey's end, Mrs. Kuzo learns an important fact that recasts her whole life.

This book is a brilliant collage of personalities and relationships, family and friends. It is an alternately heart-wrenching, bittersweet, and humorous story of guilt and loss, of intractability and toughness, of the role of luck in survival, of forgiveness and redemption, and especially of the power of women to sustain one another in the hardscrabble struggle that is life.
Info icon
ISBN-13: 9781883523237
ISBN-10: 1883523230
Publication Date: 5/1998
Pages: 221
Rating:
  • Currently 3/5 Stars.
 11

3 stars, based on 11 ratings
Publisher: Spinsters Ink Books
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

Bonnie avatar reviewed Turnip Blues on + 422 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 5
I was looking for something light and fun to read, and assumed this would be a Fannie Flagg-type of book, or one like Clyde Edgerton's Walking Across Egypt, or maybe something similar to the Mama books. It started out that way, 2 fiesty, near over-written elderly ladies going on a road trip to Bessie Smith's grave...cute, almost too cute. But then it gradually changed, evolved. The bones of the story hardened, it grew muscle, adding strength to the prose, the plot. These two are more than the typical sweet yet gritty old ladies, they are women of substance. The trip itself became incidental as we relived their lives through memories, right up to the end. A surprising novel, a satisfying read. I'd definitely read more by this author.
phillyartlovesbooks avatar reviewed Turnip Blues on + 59 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Two elderly women go on a pilgrimage from Pittsburgh to Philadelphia to clean up Bessie Smith's grave! On the way we learn about their relationship as well as the narrator and her troubled life. Really interesting reading.
reviewed Turnip Blues on + 101 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Enjoyable story of two friends in a "better late than never" coming of age tale.
reviewed Turnip Blues on + 24 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Delightful book!
reviewed Turnip Blues on + 21 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Book was a lot of fun to read. My book group loved this tale of "two gritty old women" traveling and reflecting on their lives.
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reviewed Turnip Blues on + 64 more book reviews
This 1st time author received the Barnes and Noble Notable Book award when the book was published in 1998. It was well deserved, as this "road trip" story of two long time women friends is filled with characters, not all like-able but all memorable, and with events that could color any woman's life. The story unfolds in a series of flashbacks and current activities that are told in a humorous and heart-wrenching way. Did I mention that the two women on this road trip are 75!

I read this as a book club discussion choice and the other 8 members of the group enjoyed it also.


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