Grandfather Vance’s neighbor Julia, who has also befriended Emily, was Dulcie’s classmate and acknowledges that in high school Dulcie-spoiled, rich and popular-mercilessly teased Julia, then a troubled teen who dyed her hair pink and cut herself. Win tells Emily that his uncle committed suicide because Dulcie cruelly exposed his secret to the town. Emily makes friends with Win, a teenage boy whose family secret requires him to stay inside at night. And then there are the locals’ less-than-warm memories of Dulcie. Emily immediately confronts unexplainable peculiarities: Grandfather Vance turns out to be a shy giant over eight feet tall the wallpaper in Emily’s room changes at will strange white lights materialize at night in the woods outside her window objects appear and disappear without reason. Raised by her selfless, politically active mother Dulcie in Boston, Emily has never met or heard about her grandfather until she comes to live with him in Mullaby, N.C., after Dulcie’s sudden death. In Allen’s newest sugar-and-spice Southern fantasy ( The Sugar Queen, 2008, etc.), a teenage girl comes to live with her grandfather in a small town where oddity is a way of life.
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