Calling Me Home: A Novel
Calling Me Home: A Novel book cover

Calling Me Home: A Novel

Paperback – January 7, 2014

Price
$15.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
352
Publisher
St. Martin's Griffin
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1250020437
Dimensions
5.4 x 1.5 x 8.25 inches
Weight
10.4 ounces

Description

“Kibler's unsentimental eye makes the problems faced unflinchingly by [Isabelle and Dorrie] ring true. Love and family defy the expected in this engaging tale.” ― Kirkus “In Calling Me Home, Kibler has crafted a wholly original debut. . . . There's no denying the pull of Kibler's story.” ― Booklist “A rousing debut about forbidden love and unexpected friendships. . . . In this compelling tale, Kibler handles decades of race relations with sensitivity and finds a nice balance between the characters of Dorrie and Isabelle. Drawing from her own family history in Texas, Kibler relays a familiar story in a fresh way.” ― Publishers Weekly “This is deeply affecting coming-of-age story with radiant characters who will remain with the reader long after the last page is turned.” ― Romantic Times “You'd never guess that Calling Me Home is a debut novel, Julie Kibler's writing is so wise and assured. Although the two strong women she's created come from completely different backgrounds, the bond that grows between them is extraordinary, touching and believable. I laughed out loud in places and had tears in my eyes as I turned the last page. I can't wait to watch Julie Kibler's star rise!” ― New York Times bestselling author Diane Chamberlain “Clear your schedule before you open up this thoroughly engaging book. Calling Me Home is a story about love in its many incarnations--in romance, friendships, and families; loves lost, and love regained. Kibler illuminates racial tensions many of us don't realize still exist in this country, and shows how small acts of faith can make big inroads to acceptance. I closed the final page with a smile and a tear, humbled and eager to embrace life.” ― Margaret Dilloway, author of How to Be an American Housewife “Pop some corn and grab a hankie before you start Calling Me Home because you won't want to put it down until you come to the end of this true journey of the heart.” ― Carleen Brice, author of Orange Mint and Honey “ Calling Me Home is a tenderly wrought story of love and secrets, heartbreak and healing, and the remarkable power of friendship to heal two women who find each other across the lines of time, generation, and race. Julie Kibler has written an original and moving debut novel that will linger with you for a long, long time.” ― Barbara O'Neal, The Garden of Happy Endings “Julie Kibler grabbed me on the very first page and didn't let go. . . . What a marvel of a debut novel. Black and white, young and old, searching and missing and finding in each other a special understanding, companionship, and love, these characters are real and addictive. Calling Me Home was keenly conceived, impeccably plotted, and beautifully written.” ― Barbara Delinsky, New York Times bestselling author of Escape and Not My Daughter “Touching and unforgettable, Julie Kibler's Calling Me Home is the kind of story that pulls you in from page one, grips your heart and absolutely won't let go.” ― Sarah Jio, author of The Violets of March and The Bungalow “ Calling Me Home is journey into the heart where secrets hide and love reigns. Across the bridge of race and generation, Julie Kibler brings together two who profoundly influence each other as they reveal their stories and their heartbreak. With a stunning plot twist, Kibler reminds the reader that things aren't always as they appear and love has its own life.” ― Patti Callahan Henry, New York Times bestselling author of Coming Up For Air “If Julie Kibler's novel Calling Me Home were a young woman, her grandmother would be To Kill a Mockingbird , her sister would be The Help and her cousin would be The Notebook . But even with such iconic relatives, Calling Me Home stands on her own; this novel uncovers a painful past that tells us so much about who we are, where we're going, and the people who are traveling with us.” ― Wiley Cash, New York Times bestselling author of A Land More Kind Than Home JULIE KIBLER began writing Calling Me Home after learning a bit of family lore: as a young woman, her grandmother fell in love with a young black man in an era and locale that made the relationship impossible. When not writing, she enjoys travel, independent films, music, photography, and corralling her teenagers and rescue dogs. She lives in Arlington, Texas. Calling Me Home is her debut.

Features & Highlights

  • In
  • Calling Me Home
  • by Julie Kibler, eighty-nine-year-old Isabelle McAllister has a favor to ask her hairdresser Dorrie Curtis. It's a big one. Isabelle wants Dorrie, a black single mom in her thirties, to drop everything to drive Isabelle from her home in Arlington, Texas, to a funeral in Cincinnati. With no clear explanation why. Tomorrow.Curious whether she can unlock the secrets of Isabelle's guarded past, she agrees, not knowing it will be a journey that changes both their lives.Over the years, Dorrie and Isabelle have developed more than just a business relationship. They are friends. But Dorrie, fretting over the new man in her life and her teenage son's irresponsible choices, still wonders why Isabelle chose her.Isabelle confesses that, as a willful teen in 1930s Kentucky, she fell deeply in love with Robert Prewitt, a would-be doctor and the black son of her family's housekeeper―in a town where blacks weren't allowed after dark. The tale of their forbidden relationship and its tragic consequences makes it clear Dorrie and Isabelle are headed for a gathering of the utmost importance and that the history of Isabelle's first and greatest love just might help Dorrie find her own way.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(5.2K)
★★★★
25%
(2.1K)
★★★
15%
(1.3K)
★★
7%
(601)
-7%
(-602)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Great story, great writer, I wish she had more books written for me to read.

I've been looking for an author like this. If you read this and you know of other authors who write like Julia Kibler, please let me know. On Amazon, you could probably reach me by asking a question. On Goodreads, I think you can just comment and it will get to me.

This novel was character driven, heartfelt, wholesome, and with just the right amount of description. Kibler relied heavily on character interaction and conversation to bring out the complications of love, family relations, and race relations. I loved the way, in the accounts of both generations, she wisely painted how two close friends, without race issues in their hearts, misunderstand that there were. It's relevant to today where, when we are not vocal, but remain kindly silent, we are sometimes misunderstood and are opening accused of thinking like others who are "like" us.

This is a story of forbidden love. Isabelle, a young, white woman, falls in love with a black man in the forties, in the south, for all the right reasons. He's intelligent, engaged with the world, humble, kind, hard-working, sensitive, protective, and loyal. His qualities are unmatched by any white suitors acceptable to her family.

Isabelle asks Dorrie, her black hair dresser, to take her to Cincinnati to a funeral. During their trip, Kibler switches between the present in Dorrie's first person point of view and Isabelle's heartbreaking past, also in first person. By mobile phone, Dorrie, a single mom, deals with a crisis with her two teenagers and tries to trust her new love interest to help her. As Isabelle relates the prejudices of the past, the two women are forced to interact with the prejudices of today at restaurants and hotels.

Everything is eventually tied up beautifully, all questions answered. Love that!

It's just so, so good.
23 people found this helpful
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Compelling enough but left me disappointed

The book was well written and drew me in quickly but I was very disappointed in the lack of character and relationship development. The part of the book set in the present seemed like nothing but a commentary on both the story of Isabelle and Robert and modern day race relations. Isabelle was initially portrayed as a smart, free-spirited, adventurous girl but I found her to be more selfish, boring and unlikable. SPOILERS: She told Robert she wanted to do something important with her life but none of her actions supported that. Near the end of the book when asked if she had done any of those big things she'd told Robert she would do she said "I tried to be a good wife and mother." Seeing as she cheated on her husband and admitted she didn't really try to make a connection with either her husband or her son she clearly failed. There's also the fact that she had no real relationships other than with Robert. She used her friends to get what she wanted and while she could have continued to support herself she decided to instead marry a man she didn't love and was bored of. While I like many books with unlikable protagonists this one was just not good.
6 people found this helpful
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It was just ok....

I give the author kudos for this being her first book and telling her families story. But overall I didn't like it and only gave it three stars for the very last page which did kind of make me shed a tear. My book club read this book and out of nine women from all walks of life, none of us like it (some actually hated it!)

Everything was just too much and it seems like she tried to add into many story lines and cliches about race and stereotypes that never went anywhere. Dorrie's voice was not believable at all (and I'm not saying that just because it was a white woman writing a black person) as there were times when Isabelle's rang hollow as well. This whole book just fell flat for me and I was expecting so much based on the other reviews on this site.
4 people found this helpful
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A notable debut.

I loved this debut novel. A heartbreaking story of an elderly white Southern Woman that asks her black hairdresser to drive her home, for a funeral, that she can't manage on her own. It is a painful journey, as Isabelle relates her tragic story to her friend. It goes back and forth between the late 30s and early 40s to the present. Dorrie, a young single Mom, has her own troubles, that she sets aside to help
Isabelle to return home. A painful reminder of our ugly racial history, that Julie Kibler tells, with honesty.
I will take this story with me.
3 people found this helpful
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Predictable and slow

I listened to this book as it was suggested by a friend who loved it. I didn't like it and here's why:
1. If Dorrie was such a good friend of Isabel's why didn't she ask who's funeral they were going to instead of driving halfway across the county being in the dark? Why, because it would have ruined a major plot device. When characters don't act in a way that real people would just to fit the story, that's something I find "cheap" writing.
2. The book was so slow and repititious, I skipped a couple of chapters after the first half and never lost the thread. Throughout the book I found Dorrie's chapters more interesting, and by the second half I could listen to only a few minutes of Isabel's recollection from the past and then listen to Dorrie's following chapter and still follow the story. Why? Because what Isabel had told us was repeated in Dorrie's chapter through her reaction to what Isabel had recounted.
3. My mother was born the same year as Isabel, but didn't speak in such a flowery way, using out-moded phrases as Isabel does. Perhaps the difference is my mother was born and raised in a northern city; Isabel was born and raised in the South. To my ears, Isabel sounded like a character coming of age in 1840, not 1940. I found her manner of speech and phrasing off-putting.

I was listening to this book while on a trip and after a few chapters, I said, "Oh, this is what happens...." And I was correct on the major points, so that's why I say this book is predictable even though it tried to have a plot twist in the last part.
3 people found this helpful
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Amazing saga

I had heard it was a good book so I ordered it and was not prepared for this incredible story. It spans decades. You will need to put the book down a time or 2 or 3 and walk around and recompose yourself before picking it back up again. It is an epic of a time when life was very tough and ugly towards POC and those that cared and wanted things to be different. I have listened to the audible version of this book and bought the paperback for a friend.
2 people found this helpful
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Arrived quickly and in good condition

Arrived quickly and in good condition
1 people found this helpful
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Not for me

I feel like this should have been listed under pre-teen drama. The story was very predictable. It was like a conglomeration of stories that have already been told.
1 people found this helpful
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Isabelle's story will stay with you

Well written. I cared about both Isabelle and Dorrie - two good women from different backgrounds and decades apart in age. I enjoyed being part of their unusual friendship.
That said, Isabelle's story held my interest far greater than Dorrie's, whose story was more like the shadow. It was there but could not stand alone.
Although I would recommend this book, it was not a page turner for me until the very end of the book.
1 people found this helpful
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One of the best novel's I've recently read

One wouldn't think a novel such as this would create suspense for readers, but it certainly succeeded in doing so for this reader.

Ms. Kibler's characters were so clearly portrayed, I felt a closeness to them right from the beginning. This is a story about relationships, heartache, and the effects of intolerance on those who are simply trying to live a life filled with happiness, fulfilling love, and satisfying family relationships.

So many of us take those characteristics for granted. You will no longer do so once you've met Calling Me Home's extraordinary people.
1 people found this helpful