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Formats
Paperback Book Details
  • 10/2017
  • 9780692935194 0692935193
  • 245 pages
  • $$14.00
Joyce Hicks
Author
One More Foxtrot: a tale of second chances
Joyce Hicks, author
The year after octogenarian Betty Miles' exit from senior living as told in Hicks' Escape from Assisted Living, she's staying in Chicago. Her daughter Sharon D'Angelo is busy with Sharon's Desserts, her new shop in Elkhart, Indiana, funded by a legacy from her father. This equanimity between Betty and Sharon may be short-lived after a stranger makes an astonishing claim. Will mother and daughter work through this mystery together? Of course not. They have protected each other from upsetting truths their entire lives. With her hands full--catering clients making moves on her husband Vince, her mother-in-law meddling in the desserts, and a visitor sleeping over--Sharon encourages her mother to stay away. Time isn't right for revelations of the goings-on in Elkhart that have propelled Sharon's Desserts from the red to the black. Betty's happy in her city life with friend Eleanor. She's speed dating, making new friends, and reconnecting with an old one. She's also sleuthing family history, but her suspicions she keeps from Sharon because a good wife and mother should not tarnish a reputation. When all the women meet by accident in Chicago, results of past transgressions come to light. They must ask what does it take to forgive, or move on, or rekindle romance? And do second chances offer just deserts? The Miles and D'Angelo experience with rewritten family history offers answers.
Reviews
Kirkus Reviews

"In Hicks' (Escape from Assisted Living, 2014) sequel, a senior widow acquaints herself with the pleasures of city life as she grapples with a damning family secret.

Betty Miles, an octogenarian woman who recently ran away from her assisted living apartment in Elkhart, Indiana,moves to Chicago to reignite her joie de vivre. She moves in with her eccentric, metropolitan friend Eleanor Goldman,who makes it her job to brighten Betty's tastes in clothing, food, culture, and even sex. While the two women gallivant around the city--taking French lessons, speed dating, whiling away hours in posh cafes--Betty's daughter, Sharon D'Angelo, hunkers down in her newly opened bakery back in Elkhart. Betty's move to the city strains the mother-daughter relationship. Sharon, though relieved that she no longer needs to worry about her mother keeping busy, is also troubled by Betty's newfound lust for unconventional senior living. Betty, though enlivened by the energy of urban life, worries that she's shirking her motherly duty by being so far away from her daughter as she starts a new business. But these discomforts turn out to be the least of the women's concerns when a pink-haired young lady shows up at Sharon's door one night to reveal a shocking family secret. Throughout the rest of the novel, Betty--who became privy to the secret in the previous installment--and Sharon attempt to protect each other from the truth. Hicks shows how this endeavor becomes increasingly fraught and difficult as both women encounter more coincidences that encourage a final revelation. Overall, the plot twists are skillfully placed and effectively threaten the tenderness that the author cultivates between Sharon and Betty. The writing is clean and breezy throughout; Hicks tackles weighty themes, including death, deceit, jealousy, and regret, but she does so with a sense of reserve and a cheerful sense of humor--an approach that makes for an indulgent reading experience. 

A gentle family drama that's as pleasant as watching an episode of Gilmore Girls or knitting in bed."--Kirkus Reviews

Renee Janes for Windy City Reviews

In a pop culture media world devoted to sex, violence, and instant gratification, Joyce Hicks writes quiet, charming stories about an elderly Indiana woman and her family that delight and amuse us, and remind us of the best moments in our own lives.

In One More Foxtrot, Betty Miles is spreading her wings as a septuagenarian widow in Chicago while her daughter, Sharon D'Angelo, is back in Elkhart, Indiana, trying to launch her own bakery business and maintain solid relationships with her husband and in-laws. Mother and daughter share concerns about each other, and even some guilt about being apart, but they are both on paths of self-realization—Betty, exploring the worlds of art and culture that had been invisible to her during decades of life as a homemaker and mother, and Sharon, trying to make a career out of her great passion for baking.

Life for both of them is a series of small conflicts that flare up and die and we settle into a pleasant, interesting story with a distinctive Midwestern pace and flavor. Then a young college student shows up at Sharon's bakery, claiming to be related to her, and sharing her passion for baking. From this point on, One More Foxtrot becomes a story about family secrets, as Betty tries to shield Sharon from the truth about an affair her late husband had, and Sharon contemplates telling her mother about her father's other family. The ensuing drama is engaging—sometimes gripping, sometimes fun, and always interesting—as Ms. Hicks takes us on a lovely ride through a modern Middle America that is as real as it is entertaining.

Joyce Hicks is a wonderful wordsmith and storyteller. Her prose is clear and easy to read, her characters lovingly drawn, her dialogue lean and moving, yet just as real as the chatter in a beauty salon. The book is filled with humor—mostly quiet humor that makes you smile and maybe think of people and events from your own life. It's also a tale in which all of the characters have strengths and flaws, which makes this narrative textured, complex, and a lot like life itself.

One More Foxtrot picks up on the lives of Betty and Sharon where Ms. Hicks' first book left off. Escape from Assisted Living is set a year earlier, when Betty decides she's got plenty of life left in her and runs off to Chicago to see what she can see. One More Foxtrot can be fully enjoyed without having read the first book, but you'll want to read them both, in any order. 

I recommend One More Foxtrot very highly, especially to readers of women's fiction. It is realistic, fun, sophisticated and yet simple, and a great companion for one's quiet moments with a hot drink and an easy chair.

News
05/22/2018
FIRST PLACE National Federation of Press Women 2018 Communications Contest

In the category of adult fiction, One More Foxtrot placed first in Indiana and nationally in the 2018 Communications Contest for NFPW. Authors will be recognized at the September national conference.

Formats
Paperback Book Details
  • 10/2017
  • 9780692935194 0692935193
  • 245 pages
  • $$14.00
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