A feel-good literary novel on understanding an unknown past, forming lasting and life-changing friendships, and developing a second chance to pursue a better future
The Dyer Legacy opens with a strange event: Claire, a young woman who’s new in town, is confronted by two potential assailants. At first, it seems the two assailants are not at all connected. Then, to Claire’s surprise, she learns that they are brothers, albeit very misguided brothers.
Claire is good-hearted to a fault. Believing that the two assailants really are not as bad as they like to portray themselves to be, she offers them a chance to pursue restaurant work and to turn their lives around.
The brothers, Sid and Mark, become an everyday feature of Claire’s life. Claire, in the meantime, struggles to understand the childhood which shaped her own life outlook. The trio embrace an entirely new set of adventures together, and they learn that just because each of them comes from a set of seemingly poor circumstances does not mean that their futures cannot be reclaimed and lived with fullness and satisfaction.
Claire is a fascinating, well-developed protagonist. Her drive and determination are inspiring, though at times her good-heartedness seems a bit over the top. However, despite that, she stands as a positive example of the kindness the world so desperately needs.
Claire’s most admirable trait is how she believes everyone deserves a chance to discover their talents and use their skills. This is most evident when, despite Mark and Sid’s strange first attempt to mug Claire, Claire offers to help the brothers by offering them jobs that will give them more social and financial stability.
The character list in this novel is expansive. At times, that expansiveness makes the plot confusing. Characters’ names blend and blur as they appear, are introduced, disappear, and reappear. Nonetheless, the novel’s sectioning—with specific places and dates clearly identified—helps alleviate some of that confusion, as well as some of the novel’s psychological and emotional twists and turns. The flashback sections to the characters’ pasts also help develop the novel, but occasionally, it feels like some events should have been housed in a separate book.
The novel thoughtfully examines place and how one’s geographic environment, as well as their social one, influence their choices and decisions. The juxtaposition of environment—ranging from California cityscapes to Wyoming ranchland—in turn makes the book’s audience think about the significance of place(s) in one’s life and in one’s development.
The Dyer Legacy is an adventure that could easily be turned into a cozy film due to its naturally cinematic nature. The lessons it offers about kindness, second chances, and redemption are lessons its audience will not soon forget.
The post The Dyer Legacy by Albert Sipes appeared first on Independent Book Review.