By Mignon Ballard
This is a snapshot of an era and a place that evokes a feeling of déjà vu because it is so well done that as you read you feel like you were alive in 1942 and living in Elderberry, Georgia.


In a pull together effort the people of the town try not to complain about the substitutions like Postum for the coffee, honey or saccharine for sugar and an unappealing margarine with a blob of food coloring. The ladies wear rayon’s instead of nylons and such innocent items as balloons are a thing of the past. For thanksgiving dinner deserts may be sparse and hens are substituted for turkey. But it is the company that counts.
Miss Dimple Kilpatrick a first grade teacher disappears one morning while on her usual walk and this mystery just simmers a bit because the mysterious death of the school custodian is also the talk of the town. In a community effort different individuals try to find clues and even though Miss Dimple has left several the people of Elderberry are so accustomed to safety that they are blind to the possibility of danger. This is the only part of the book that is a little hard to believe in, but even as it is today the people are tired, discouraged and busied by their daily lives and have little ways to investigate mysteries.
Initially it seems that there are two many characters to keep straight, but eventually the reader gets to know the personalities behind the names and begins to feel at home in Elderberry. I have known people like this. I only wonder if we have changed as a society to such an extent that we would not be willing to give up such personal items as hangers and our pots and pans. Are there enough of us who know how to cook using substitutions to make meals enjoyable or even palatable since we have grown up with ready made.

