Reviews

The Happy Hour Choir by Sally Kilpatrick

mysgal305's review

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4.0

In all fairness, the copy of the book that I got ahold of is uncorrected proof.
I found a couple of mishaps or plot holes that would take out of it briefly but I didn't let that affect my score as again, uncorrected proof.
What did impact my score is this:
Pros:
Most of the characters were extremely likable. The described feeling of abandonment and hurt by faith is truly believable. And we all know a Ms. Lottie in our lives and they infuriate us.
We all need a Ginger in our lives. A nonjudgemental sweet ol' lady who has a sense of humor and a heart of diamond (because gold is so pretty but so damageable).
Con (because there was only really one for me):
It's hard to keep supporting Buelah. She is a queen of wallowing in self-pity and while she has major character growth, it gets repetitive when she makes choices out of pure stubbornness.
I rarely read romance and even more rare than that is reading Christian fiction (Sally, you can thank Tessa for getting me to read it). It was definitely worth the read.

crysdale's review

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5.0

Good glory, this is probably the best book I've read in a while! One of those rare books that sucked me in and when I finished, my heart was pounding and I couldn't figure out why the rest of the world was going on like normal! I can't wait to see what Sally Kilpatrick comes up with next!

thebookishlibrarian's review

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5.0

Beulah Land’s life hasn’t been easy: the daughter of a Baptist deacon, she was estranged from her family after her teenage pregnancy. Luckily, she was taken in by a lovely woman named Ginger. Now Beulah spends her nights playing piano at The Fountain, a local bar. When Ginger finds out she’s dying of cancer, it is her final wish that Beulah take over playing piano for the County Line Church. She doesn’t hit it off with the church’s pastor, Luke Daniels, and on top of that the choir members aren’t too keen on the non-traditional music she chooses for them to perform. Beulah begins to think things won’t ever go right when she starts to fall for Luke, and he shows her that there is a light at the end of the tunnel.

felinity's review

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4.0

4.5 stars

Beulah is a preacher's daughter, estranged from her family and running from God. She makes her living playing piano at the local dive bar, one with a reputation for tough customers who don't hold with religion.

Ginger took her in when she had nowhere else to go, so when Ginger's dying wish is for Beulah to take her place as the church pianist, Beulah can't really refuse. She also can't anticipate the repercussions from this request, or the impact on so many other people.

At times I was startled by the characters, even wondering if this really were a Christian novel, so different was it from the soft, fluffy fiction that often emerges in this genre. These characters are *real*. They're tempted, broken, misunderstood, hurting, and full of secrets. They live the lessons we internalize without even knowing it, the questions we have about why bad things happen to good people, the effects of hurt and pride, that none of us can pass judgement on anyone else, and most of all the effects of community and friends.

A great read, thought-provoking and moving.

Disclaimer: I received a free copy from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.

jnikolova's review

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4.0

Read on the WoundrousBooks Blog

The Happy Hour Choir is a beautiful, inspiring tale of faith, forgiveness, second chances and hope. Each of the characters has their own dark and sad past, which doesn't stop them from striving to be better and stronger and doing their very best in each situation. The characters sometimes fail, but their struggle is what makes them so lively and great. Just like the best of us, they always try and try again.


Although what I've said above is not visible in each situation, it's not hard to see that it's still true, because each of the characters emerges from the deepest and darkest holes of despair.


I've always said how much I admire well-written characters and this is one such instance. They might not be always likeable, but the reader can certainly put oneself in their shoes. The character that I liked the most is, without a big surprise here, Ginger. She is the heart and soul of this book. Although Beulah is the main character, I don't see how this entire story would be possible if it lacked Ginger. I know that we all complain about the way the world is filled with bad people and that everyone is looking after their own behind, but I'd like to state that in most instances in which I've met people I'd label "good", they have been like Ginger, good to their very core. We always say that the world is not black and white, but it seems to me that the true form of good is completely white. The people who want to do good - they just overflow with it, they are able to pass this "epidemic" to others as well.


Beulah, on the other hand, may not be the character that has suffered the most, although she has suffered greatly, and yet she is the more conflicted one. She is fighting really hard not to give up, to own up to Ginger's expectations which are very high, but in no way unjust. I don't know how I would react in her situation, as it is a most complex one, especially when it comes to Tiffany, but I'm not ashamed to admit that I'm proud of a fictional character's actions. At the very end she was way to stubborn for her own good and although I felt the desire to slap her at a point, in her position I, not unfamiliar to extreme stubbornness, would probably act the same.


It was hard for me not to like Luke. Although in my opinion he is not even close to the driving center of the book, he is a great force in the shaping of Beulah and of the events of the book. Even harder to like was Tiffany who was just so innocent, despite being through so much. She really grew on me, especially in the way that she was so, so brave.


I don't know how different readers see this book, for some it may be a love story, for others it may be a tragic one. For me this was a very inspiring read. For me, this was the amazing story of three women, who are very much alike and yet so different. This was a story about overcoming grief, finding yourself and swimming out of the ocean of pain that each human being endures in their life.

jenni415's review

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5.0

Great story with great characters

I was surprised how much I loved this book. It is a great story of a woman's journey to come to peace with her past to be able to love and be loved. It has a great Christian message without being preachy or forcing all the characters to convert by the end of the story.

girlonthecsaw's review

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4.0

The Happy Hour Choir is a charming and poignant debut novel. I think it will resonate with readers who've grown up in a small town as well as those who enjoy a story with flawed but endearing characters. Ms. Kilpatrick does a lovely job blending the elements of faith-based drama, romance,and redemption story. I look forward to reading her upcoming novel, Bittersweet Creek.

hedytf's review

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4.0

I'm not usually a romance reader, but I've followed Sally online for several years. I'm also neither Southern nor religious; however, I loved this book! It flows well, has good sub-plots and really wrestles with questions of faith and family. I will warn readers that there is both abuse and rape in this book if that is an issue for you. But outstanding job and I recommend this book.

ashleyspilk's review

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3.0

Fun!

lutheranjulia's review

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3.0

This book needs a trigger warning: rape, incest, SIDS, cancer, stroke, unemployment, violence.

All of those things play enough of a reality in the book, but I had no expectation of any of them (through direct action or flashback) by reading the blurb. That being said, the book is a novel form of trying to answer the ultimate question of theodicy: why does a good God allow evil to exist/act in creation. The book doesn't answer this for all time or all places necessarily, but it does come to the most logical (and theological) conclusion at the end. Certainly the main character, Beulah, is rightly wrestling with this question after all that has happened in her life and in the lives of those around her. The small town setting amplifies this circumstance, but in a very accurate portrayal of what small-town life is like. I struggled with what to rate the book because I don't know if I would have read it if I had known all that it contained. On the other hand, it's fairly well written with above-average character development. We don't get a lot of backstory on the main male character (sketched out history, but not much more). Overall, I'm glad I read this, but I'm not sure I could read it again.


I received a review copy from NetGalley.