This is Where It Ends by Cindy K. Sproles

This is Where It Ends by Cindy K. Sproles
Series: a standalone
Publisher: Revell on June 27, 2023

REVIEW BY VERA DAY

It’s the early 1900s. Minerva Jenkins lives alone on a mountain in Kentucky. She’s ninety-four years old, and she’s been widowed for three decades. Her husband made her promise to keep his secret. She buried it in a box next to his grave. But the thing is, even she doesn’t know what’s in the box. She doesn’t know exactly what the secret is.

Probably stolen gold.

To survive alone on a mountain for so long, you know Minerva’s got to have a lot of grit. Sproles takes us deep inside Minerva’s mind. She’s not only full of grit, but wisdom, patience, and love for her dead husband. She’s also grown humorously cantankerous as shown through her dialogue. Take, for instance, this bit when she responds to Del, a visitor to the mountain who is trying to get her attention:

You look like a right smart man, bein from the city an all. I’ve lost count of the times you’ve called my name. What do you want me to do? Tie a ribbon around your pinkie so you can remember? Reckon you got me unless you feel the need to call my name . . . again.

-Cindy K. Sproles, This Is Where It Ends

As for the setting, I enjoyed the fragrant wisteria and the whispering river. I sighed at the sunset descriptions. And I appreciated the very real, aggressive nature of the kudzu on the hill behind Minerva’s cabin. She describes the vines as snake-like, with tentacles, adorning the gates of Hell, choking living things… In real life, I’ve seen whole houses covered in the stuff until there’s nothing left but a hill of green leaves. I once had lunch with friends in Virginia, and when I came back out, the kudzu at the edge of the parking lot had hooked around my front tire!

Back to Minerva:

Minerva suffers with grief, loneliness, guilt, and anger. But love covers a multitude of sins. Love is powerful. It hacks away at her isolation and pain like Del’s ax hacks away at the kudzu.

This book is slow and contemplative. Minerva repeats herself (with a little different attitude each time). But it’s not boring. It’s captivating, just like every Christmas when your grandpa tells the same story about the snapping turtle and the ignorant city feller, and you still love hearing it. (A true story in my own family, by the way.) So just a caution to other readers: this is the sort of story you have to read at an unhurried pace to take it all in, learn from Minerva’s wisdom, and glean the author’s Godly message.

Overall, this thought-provoking, emotional read earns five literary fish from me!

composite image of five drawn fish from the British Museum on unsplash

I read an advanced copy of This Is Where It Ends through NetGalley.

43 thoughts on “This is Where It Ends by Cindy K. Sproles

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  1. Thanks for this recommendation. I think the world needs more books with an old, wise, cantankerous woman protagonist. And I am so glad that you (barely) escaped that Kudzu!

    Liked by 1 person

  2. When I read a book set in the south, I expect that slow, meandering pace and enjoy it. Minerva sounds like a character I would like to get to know. Great review. Vera.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Thank you, Vera, for sharing your review. Fascinating concept and story as you’ve relayed them. It sounds like a book I’d love.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. This sounds like a book I would enjoy. Thanks for sharing your thoughts, Vera. I know about that kudzu from when we visited relatives in Alabama. That stuff will take over anything!

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Minerva sounds so much like my grandmother. She originally haled from Missouri. I love that phrase, “whispering river.” Puts you right there in the scene with just two words. I’ll be watching for the books release. Great review.

    Liked by 1 person

  6. I lived in SC for many years, and kudzu is no joke. Just think – if you’d ordered dessert, your car might have been covered when you came out, Priscilla, lol. But now I need to know what’s buried in the box.

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Oooh, I love the setting and the time period. The cover is gorgeous and your review sparkles. I’ve never heard of kudzu before, and I’m not sure I’d ever want to encounter any. This is definitely a candidate for my TBR. I have no problem with books to read slow and savor.
    Great review, Vera!

    Liked by 1 person

  8. This is very intriguing, Vera. And any book where someone takes an ax to kudzu is something I’d like to read, without knowing anything else at all. 😉Plus, I have included a bit of drama about a kudzu-covered shed in one of my books, too, so I’m even more curious about how it’s handled in this one. I realize it isn’t the prime topic, but I’m still curious about it. I also like the era, and the focus on someone of Minerva’s age living by herself on a mountaintop. It’s definitely going on my TBR pile, and thanks for sharing. 😊

    Liked by 1 person

      1. Kudzu is an invasive monster, and I often wonder if it’s that uncontrollable in Japan, where it’s a native. Someone decided to import in to the U. S. because it has sweet-smelling blooms. What a terrible mistake that was!

        I quite like slow-burn stories when they’re done well and have added this to my list. Thanks for the review! 😀

        Liked by 1 person

  9. Appreciate the honest review Ms. Vera. Sounds like a good vacation read. One where we can take our time and enjoy the story’s journey.

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