Tuesday, May 6, 2025
Although I sometimes struggle to stay awake while reading novels, Robert Inman's Villages is a rare exception- it captures your attention from the first page.
The story possesses an irresistible allure, a magnetic pull that makes it impossible to put down.
The central character, twenty-one-year-old Jonas Boulware, along with a well-developed supporting cast—including his mother, Gladys; his father, Rodney; his mentor and savior, Doc Frank Ainsley; his friend, the Lieutenant; his girlfriend, Lyric; and Ben, a young boy he tries to help from a dysfunctional family—feel remarkably realistic. Their struggles and triumphs mirror our own, making them deeply relatable.
Each character plays a crucial role in his life, interweaving a complex network of relationships that shape his journey. The plot unfolds with depth and intrigue, drawing you further into the world Inman has so skillfully created.
This type of book doesn't just captivate your thoughts; it tugs at your heartstrings and lingers in your mind long after you've closed it.
Home should bring comfort, but for Jonas, it brings ghosts. Scarred by war and burdened by memories, his return to the quiet town of Copernicus is anything but peaceful.
Family ties are frayed by worry and the weight of unspoken things, the hidden truths lurking beneath the surface like unresolved secrets that threaten to tear them apart.
Changed by experience yet returning to a place that remains largely the same, Jonas finds himself confronting shifting family dynamics shaped by long-held secrets.
No longer the person he once was, he is broken, hesitant, and grappling with guilt and loss in ways that feel painfully real. Haunted by memories of the battlefield, he struggles with PTSD.
As a former combat medic, he now faces a different kind of war—one filled with past regrets, uneasy reunions, and the haunting silence of a place that no longer feels like home.
The complexities of his past are revealed through his relationship with his mother, Gladys, whose family once owned a thriving plant that employed many in the town before her first husband's crime led to its closure.
But what Jonas doesn't yet know is that there are darker secrets about his mother's past, which threaten to surface at the most inopportune moments.
His father, Rodney, carries his burden of regrets and unspoken truths that complicate Jonas's already fragile sense of self.
His bond with Doc, a compassionate doctor who becomes both a mentor and a saviour, offers a glimmer of hope. Still, even he holds pieces of the past that Jonas is not ready to hear. Doc's unwavering support becomes a beacon of light in Jonas's darkest moments, providing medical care and a more profound healing that transcends the physical and reaches the soul.
Jonas's friendship with the Lieutenant, forged in the heat of war, is one of the few stable relationships he has left. Still, even that bond is tested by the weight of their shared experiences.
This story is more than a homecoming—it's about forging a new life in the ruins of the old, in a town that no longer feels familiar, while uncovering buried family secrets poised to alter everything Jonas thought he knew.
If you're drawn to raw, real, and deeply human stories, Villages will stay with you long after you've turned the final page.
It's a book that offers both heartache and healing and will undoubtedly resonate with anyone who has ever struggled to find their place in the world or has been touched by the secrets that bind us all. Don't miss the opportunity to experience this unforgettable narrative.
Follow Here To Read Norm's Interview With Robert Inman
Norm Goldman of Bookpleasures.com