A review by tshrope
The Coffins of Little Hope by Timothy Schaffert

3.0

I found this book on a summer reading list off the NPR site and I thought it would be a quirky fun read. It has all of the makings of a quirky novel; eighty-something Essie narrates this story and writes obits for the newspaper, her grandson, Doc, who runs the paper but really longs to be a magician, and a mystery about whether a little girl actually ever existed outside of her mother’s imagination who now claims her daughter has been abducted,--but all of these things do not a quirky fun novel make. In fact I would say it is more of a serious novel occasionally laced with bits of amusement. In addition to the mystery there is a subplot about the newest Miranda and Desiree book (think A Series of Unfortunate Events) being leaked. But overriding both plot and character is theme. This is a theme driven novel and the theme is fractured families.

Each of the main characters come from , or is a part of a fractured family. Ivy, Essie’s granddaughter abandons her 7-year old daughter, Tiff, to go to Paris with her mentor and lover. Her brother, Doc is left to raise Tiff until 6 years later Ivy unexpectedly comes back to Nebraska to become Tiff’s Mom again. Daisy, raised on nearby Crippled Eighty Farm claims her 11-year old daughter, Lenore, has been abducted by an itinerate aerial photographer, but no one seems to be able to remember Daisy ever having a daughter. (I love the names Schaffert uses for the moms: Ivy, the vine that continues to grow and overtake everything in its path and Daisy, the simple, common flower. ) Muscatine, the author of the Miranda and Desiree books has a stepdaughter whom he loves like his own (even after he has divorced her mother) and wants only her approval and love, but instead is completely disdained by her. Schaffert wants us to think about parenting and families and what makes a family, and the old adage of “Can’t live with them, can’t live without them.” He also explores other themes such as aging, death, and the media.

Schaffert is a good writer and effortlessly weaves his many themes and plot lines together effortlessly. And while it wasn’t what I thought it was going to be I did enjoy it; whether I’ll remember much about it a year from now though is doubtful.