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Binding Spell by Elizabeth Arthur β€” book cover

Binding Spell

by Elizabeth Arthur
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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Like an offbeat, modern fairy tale, this story of love and politics set in rural Indiana combines animals, weather, psychology and even a would-be witch in its own enchanting spell. Different expectations are aroused when news reaches the farming town of Felicity that two professors from Russia are due to visit local Powell College. Newly elected Sheriff Guthrie Peale is uncertain what will be required of him and his men, and his older brother Ryland, deeper than usual in his hypochondriacal funk, has none of his customary advice to offer. While consulting herbalist Ada Esterhaczy, Ryland meets Ada's granddaughter Maggie, another pessimistic soul, who is organizing the Russians' visit. The same day, Guthrie encounters Bailey Bourne, a witch-hopeful whose brother Howell is hatching a plot to kidnap the Russians and demand the burning of all the mortgages on local farms. How love quickens at an anti-nuclear war meeting; how the kidnapping is broached and botched; how Ada engineers the conception of her first great-grandchild; and how the Russians finally prove that individuals are more compelling and more interesting than ideology are only parts of the charm of this funny and moving story. After a wonderful climax scene during which a tornado wreaks havoc in Felicity, the characters variously achieve passion, happiness and balance. A tale full of wit and affection, Arthur's latest offering (after Bad Guys and Beyond the Mountain ) also boasts the best collection of dogs in recent literature. ( September )

Library Journal

Examining ``connections'' between people, Arthur creatively weaves a complicated tale of attempted kidnapping, unsuccessful witchcraft, and burgeoning love in Felicity, Indiana, a small town whose inhabitants appear too bizarre for their surroundings. With the arrival of two visiting Russian professors, glasnost comes to Felicity and a paranoid farmer's well-meaning but unlawful action sets off a chain of implausible events. The author, a skilled observer, whimsically creates townspeople who are distinctly out of the ordinary. Blending her large cast of unconventional characters into the somewhat ludicrous narrative, Arthur's outcome finally becomes plausible, enabling the comedy of errors to resolve so that all participants are able to experience personal growth at last. Ellen R. Cohen, Rockville, Md.

Book Details

Published
April 1, 1990
Publisher
Bantam Dell Pub Group (P)
Pages
384
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780553348057

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