
Well, I finished it. I had to. (Actually, it kind of bugs me when I get to the point in a story where I can't put the book down, because that means I'm useless until I finish.)
I'm impressed with many aspects of this book. It's fun, yet serious issues are confronted. One thing that stood out to me was how dysfunctional Beth's childhood situation was, yet it's all a "given" throughout the book. She doesn't consider herself particularly different from any other Latter-day Saint just because she didn't grow up in a happy happy "Love At Home" family with roses blooming beneath their feet. This is just how she is. Given the varieties of family situations in the Church and in the world today, I'm sure many readers will find this view refreshing.
Some "straight and narrow"-type readers may not appreciate this hilarious depiction of adjusting to marriage. If you're looking for traditional romance, this isn't it. If you're looking for a spiritual uplifting story about how marriage in the temple will conquer all of life's problems, you won't find that here, either. But I sure recognized myself in this one. All those first-year-of-marriage memories came flooding back as I read--those negotiations of what kind of cereal we would buy, what our roles were in our new family, ground rules for marital squabbles...it was all so familiar, and still so funny.
The First Year is published by Bonneville Books, 2006.