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Novel Shows Beauty of Found Family in All Its Complicated Glory
After suffering her own trauma, Dahlia Moscatelli has become a prisoner in her own home. That doesn't mean she can't offer it as a refuge to others, though. She and her husband, Louie, are already sheltering three long-term foster children. When a social worker begs Dahlia to take in one more—a six-year-old who's been horribly abused and needs emergency placement—she hesitates. Not only is Agnes Juniper a traumatized little girl with developmental delays, but she's also half Native American. It's 1959 in small-town Massachusetts and the Moscatellis already have enough trouble with the neighbors over taking in so many kids. When Dahlia meets Agnes, however, she caves. The damaged youngster is in such obvious need that none of the Moscatellis can bear to turn her away.
It's clear from the get-go that Agnes' presence is about to change the lives of everyone in the Moscatelli household. Over the next decade and a half, as they embrace the little girl and work together to love away her pain, the Moscatellis experience all the sorrows, challenges, and triumphs that define family life. With one special girl at their center, all of them will find healing like they've never known before.
Describing All the Children Are Home by Patry Francis is difficult because the novel really doesn't have a plot. The story meanders here and there as it details everything that happens when Agnes disrupts the Moscatellis' lives for the better. Because the tale is so unfocused, it definitely sags in places. Still, all in all, I found All the Children Are Home to be quite compelling. The characters are sympathetic and likable, even if some of them (Dahlia and Louie in particular) are not exactly warm, fuzzy types. Their story feels authentic. It's sad, with a realistically untidy end, and yet, it's also a hopeful tale about the beauty of found family in all its complicated glory. I liked the novel overall.
(Readalikes: Reminds me of Fighting Words by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley)
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