Lynn Veach Sadler, Foot Ways (Bards & Sages, 2007) Longing pervades Foot Ways the way mist settles in mountain valleys. The characters wished for more in their lives than what their families offered -- education, love -- and some were able to escape. They fled brutal or stultifying environments through books, education, music and travel.
The title "Foot Ways" refers to a foot fetish of certain men that follows into the next generation. Strangely, most of the women were attracted to such men. One woman had the misfortune to fall in love with a gay man. There were disappointments in love and in relationships. The book is filled with believable people and situations, both kind and cruel, blessings and curses, the strange and the commonplace -- in short, the stuff of life. There is tension between youth and age, old ways and modern life, between men and women, and between classes of people. A young man is blessed by his dying father and then finds himself cursed with a foot fetish of mythical proportions. I enjoyed colorful expressions such as "he didn't care a three legged dog for my heart" and "rough as a cob." Foot Ways is a delicious book and it left me wishing for more; it tasted of Southern cooking and Southern folklore. I had an idea that the author could expand on this story across time and place. It could become a family saga. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET review by Barbara Spring 30 June 2007 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |