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But life on the Key is also eternally rural. Your neighbours live not next door, but miles away down unmade roads. You'll probably be as familiar with the local wildlife as you will with them. And isolated people are often eccentric and idiosyncratic. Why shouldn't they be? They're not bothering anyone. Ted Olinger's stories about his life on the Key evoke all these things and more. A young family, desperate for a good night's sleep, do battle with the Northern Flicker woodpecker who has taken up residence on their roof and whose woodpecking not only keeps them awake but also threatens the physical structure of their home. A not-so-kooky-after-all neighbour nails protest poems to trees. Employing a gardener gets you your very own shaman.
But it's also about lives everyone can recognise. A little boy - a son - conquers his fear of failure and takes his first steps towards playing baseball. A marriage breaks down. A parent dies. These events and emotions are univeral and Olinger blends them seamlessly into his setting.
These really are rather beautiful stories. Thick and sticky with a sense of time, place and character, they are absorbing and thoughtful. But because they feel so honest and full-hearted, they are a simple pleasure to read. I got to the end and went straight back to the beginning for a second helping.

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