Step-Ball-Change: Summary and book reviews of Step-Ball-Change by Jeanne Ray, plus links to an excerpt from Step-Ball-Change and a biography of Jeanne Ray.
Step-Ball-Change
by Jeanne Ray
Hardcover: May 2002,
240 pages.
Paperback: Mar 2003,
240 pages.
With a ringing phone, Jeanne Ray's charming and amusing new novel gets off to a rollicking start that never lets up. Not for a minute. On the other end of the phone is Caroline's daughter, Kay, a public defender like her father, sobbing at the improbably good news that the richest, most eligible boy in Raleigh, North Carolina, has asked her to marry him. While Caroline and Tom are trying to digest this, the other phone, the "children's line," rings; it is Caroline's sister, Taffy, hysterical over her husband's decision to leave her for a woman two years younger than her daughter.
Soon Taffy is wending her way up from Atlanta to seek solace in her sister's home, even though the two have been separated by more than just geography for the past forty years. With her is her little dog, Stamp, who has a penchant for biting ankles and stealing hearts. Tom and Caroline quickly realize that the wedding their future son-in-law's family is envisioning for nine-hundred-plus guests is to be their fiscal responsibility. To top it all off, the foundation of their home is in danger of collapsing and their contractor and his crew have all but moved in. It's a thundering whirlwind of emotion that finally boils down to: Who is in love with whom? and Who's going to get the next dance?
Wise, funny, and impossible to put down, Step-Ball-Change is peopled with characters you feel you have known your whole life. It's the kind of book that you can't bear to see end.
BOOK REVIEWS
Media Reviews
Kirkus Reviews
Ray fashions another mild-tempered, predictable, yet nonetheless amusing romantic comedy about a sexagenarian narrator and her love-vexed grown kids.... A by-the-numbers family drama that won't fail to please softy readers.
Booklist - Danise Hoover
In a novel as comfortable and inviting as coffee at your best friend's kitchen table, Ray, author of Julie and Romeo (2000), introduces Caroline, a woman who has a life possibly too full of happiness and fulfillment to be normal. Appealing and entertaining, although unchallenging, this could be the perfect diversion.
Publishers Weekly
Although Ray allows the sap level to rise a little too high as the inevitable picture-perfect ending rolls around, she has a gift for lively dialogue that makes the characters snap into place.
Library Journal - Rebecca Kelm
Funny, believable, and full of surprises, this novel, like time with a good friend, is over far too soon. Strongly recommended for popular fiction collections.
Recent Reader Reviews
Rated of 5
by DebbieinMaine Step-Ball-Change I enjoyed the audiobook read by the author. She has a nice reading voice and definitely added to the characters. It does have that "almost too clean ending" but leaves you feeling satisfied that you have listened to it.
Rated of 5
by Paula C. Slice of Life I loved this book. It's like "life"--funny, sad, ironic, and hopeful. I related to the main character's passion for dance, complicated family relationships, and mid-life concerns. I can't wait to pass it along to my best friend, so we can discuss... Read More
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