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Sunday, December 16, 2007

Literary Review- Keeping Misery Company

Author: Michelle Larks
Publisher: Kensington Publishing Corp.
Cost: $14.95
Pages: 358
ISBN: 978-1-60162-948-7



Old secrets, lies, drama, and faith are put into one book called Keeping Misery Company by Michelle Larks. Michelle takes you into the lives of an ordinary looking Christian family and demonstrates just how out of order they are but the power of faith keeps them together.

Ruth Wilcox is the daughter of Chicago minister, Reverend Isaiah Clayton and Queen Esther, a wife to Daniel Wilcox, a mother, and grandmother. Ruth grew up knowing one world and that was the church. She looked up to her mother and father and only went against their wishes once and that’s when she married Daniel who was a bus driver and a player.

Daniel thought that he could mold Ruth into the woman that he wanted her to be and it didn’t hurt that church girls were supposed to be freaks in bed. However, Daniel married a minister’s daughter who was not your average church girl. Ruth is a woman who had family values and believes in being righteous everyday. Daniel’s main issue with Ruth was that she seemed to be more involved with their children than their fastly dwindling relationship. Ruth cooked and cleaned for her husband, but she didn’t do what he wanted the most and that was to spend time with him in and out of the bed.

Ruth and Daniel begin to sleep in separate rooms and live separate lives. Ruth feels like the marriage could be repaired but Daniel thinks that it’s just too late, especially when he meets Lenora, a young sexy lady that fulfills Daniel needs and desires.

After an emotional divorce Ruth has to look towards her faith and move on with her life but that is not as easy as it sounds because old secrets within the family begin to surface and Ruth is left to repair everyone’s faith, thus Keeping Misery Company.

I think that this book was well written and it definitely shows that there is good and bad in family relationships. The one thing that bothered me as a reader is in the beginning, Ruth knows that she is the main cause to her husband staying out late and his infidelity because she admits to letting go of her looks and paying more attention to the kids.
Daniel asked her on plenty of occasions to spend time with him. Ruth promised that when their youngest child went to college that she would make that commitment but she did not follow through leaving Daniel no other choice but to feel that he has to get the attention from elsewhere.

Why is he considered the bad guy for asking for what he wants from his wife? Was he or was he not deserving of the attention that he wanted from Ruth? Wouldn’t a woman ask for the same thing and expect to receive it?
Daniel did do some dumb things but I don’t think he should have been made out to be a bad person throughout the story. If Ruth had been performing her wifely duties then Daniel wouldn’t have left.

Check out the book and tell me what you think…

Agasa Elitou- Book Reviewer

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