The Homecoming: A Novel About Spencer's Mountain by Earl Hamner Jr. | Goodreads
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The Homecoming: A Novel About Spencer's Mountain

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When Clay Spencer fails to arrive home at the expected hour on Christmas Eve of 1933, his family grows concerned. While his seven brothers and sisters and his mother keep vigil the older son, Clay-boy, goes in search of his father. But on his journey through the snowbound Virginia hills, the boy experiences a series of hazardous, touching and hilarious adventures.

His life is endangered by an enraged deer, the family's honor is threatened by a well-meaning outsider, and unexpected help is provided by the fearsome county sheriff. An encounter with the neighborhood Negro community church teaches Clay-boy a lesson in race relations and, while taking refuge from a snowstorm, he is overwhelmed by the intoxicating hospitality of two elderly genteel lady bootleggers.

Finally, at midnight, when all hope for him has been abandoned, Clay Spencer provides a surprising climax to the story, and in a single moment illuminates the triumph of the human spirit. Rich with life that rings true, filled with nostalgia, laughter and tears, The Homecoming is a warm and wonderful classic of American literature.

125 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1970

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About the author

Earl Hamner Jr.

21 books82 followers
Earl Henry Hamner Jr. (born July 10, 1923 in Schuyler, Virginia), was an American television writer and producer (sometimes credited as Earl Hamner), best known for his work in the 1970s and 1980s on the long-running CBS series The Waltons and Falcon Crest. As a novelist, he was best known for Spencer’s Mountain, which was inspired by his own childhood and formed the basis for both the film of the same name and the television series The Waltons, for which he provided voiceover narration.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 119 reviews
Profile Image for Matt.
4,045 reviews12.9k followers
December 22, 2023
An annual reading tradition for me that I am happy to share again with readers.

No holiday season is complete in my household without remembering the story of The Homecoming. When, on Christmas Eve, Clay Spencer has not returned home from his forty mile trek for the holidays, the entire Spencer household is on edge. Olivia pines for her husband's safe return, but cannot put life on hold as she waits. With a brood of eight, she turns to Clay-Boy, her eldest, to take up the role of 'man of the house' at the tender age of fifteen.

As the story progresses, Clay-Boy is not only playing the role of man, but also must engage in a trek to locate his father and bring him home for the holidays. As Christmas Eve turns to night, the Spencers engage in their own family traditions, meagre as they may be in the midst of the Depression. It is not Santa for whom they wait this Christmas of 1933, but Clay and his safe homecoming to spend time with those he cherishes most. Sure to become an annual tradition for holiday reading lists, Hamner Jr. entertains and depicts the era so effectively.

I grew up watching The Homecoming as part of the annual Christmas preparation. The book was on hand, but I never took the time to read it until a few years ago. Doing so, I came to realise how special this story is and the tradition is one I will continue. I wish not to stand on a soapbox, but the holidays are about love and support, not the material things. Hamner Jr. makes that known throughout this novel, as well as in Spencer's Mountain. Do take some time to read them and enjoy all they have to offer.

Kudos, Mr. Hamner Jr., for instilling in me the annual reminder that love trumps all. Merriest of Christmases to all!

Like/hate the review? An ever-growing collection of others appears at:
http://pecheyponderings.wordpress.com/
Profile Image for Loretta.
344 reviews212 followers
December 11, 2020
As I was reading this short story it seemed quite familiar to me. I can only guess that I read it in high school. Regardless, it was well worth reading again to remind me of a simpler time! Would recommend to all...five ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️‘s!
Profile Image for Melki.
6,454 reviews2,462 followers
December 11, 2019
Hamner's 1970 book became "The Homecoming: A Christmas Story" a 1971 made-for-TV movie which served as the pilot for the long-running CBS television drama The Waltons. If you've never seen the popular film, the story involves a long-ago Christmas eve where a large Depression era family awaits the return of the patriarch, who's been away working in the big city. As the hours drag with no sign of her husband, the mother grows worried, and sends her oldest son out into a storm to look for his father. There's great concern that he may have stopped off for some bootleg whiskey, or fallen into a game of cards at the Negro church -- things I don't remember being dwelt on much in the TV adaptation. The younger children are, of course, more concerned with thoughts of Santa, and whether or not barnyard animals can speak at midnight.

Even though, with the exception of the mother, all characters have different names, it's impossible NOT to picture the cast of The Waltons when reading this. Since one of the girls in this book is named Pattie-Cake, I must applaud the decision to change the monikers. Undoubtedly "Good night, John-Boy" sounds much better than "Good night, Clay-Boy."

Though I remember enjoying Spencer's Mountain in my teens, Hamner's writing here is unimpressive. This is not much more than a short story stretched to book length. I'll add this book to my "movie was better" shelf, and perhaps go looking for the DVD.
Profile Image for Chantal.
1,026 reviews164 followers
January 18, 2023
Again a great story for Christmas. How I wished that it would have been longer, that is how much I enjoyed this story. Easy read and great for a Saturday or around Christmas. The writer is great in keeping your attention. A well deserved 5 points.
Profile Image for Lesle.
212 reviews77 followers
January 18, 2016
This novel is so heartwarming, makes you smile, cringe and sadden at times throughout.
I cannot imagine living during the depression with such a large family. The father Clay has to leave to find work and the family struggles to make Christmas special anyways. Out of the 8 children there are ones that still believe in Santa and when Clay makes it home on Christmas Eve he tells a tell of Santa that reinforces their belief.

The Homecoming is the basis for the TV show 'The Waltons'. I love watching the show when I was growing up and some of them stick with me. Family above everything else, means everything!
Profile Image for Jason Pierce.
774 reviews97 followers
December 12, 2023
Update, 12/11/2023:

The audiobook narrated by Milton Bagby was pretty decent. There wasn't anything wrong with it, yet it wasn't top-tier either. I guess I'd give his performance four stars, or maybe a very high three. If I wasn't so familiar with other audiobook narrators who are at the top of their class, then I wouldn't even mention it.

I also saw the new Waltons Thanksgiving movie a couple of weeks ago that came out last year, and... Well, it wasn't terrible. It wasn't even bad, though I don't think I ever need to see it again. However, the revisionist BS requires a lot of suspension of disbelief for those of us who know our history. A father in the backwoods of Virginia who never spanked his children in the 1890/1900s because he didn't believe in physical punishment and remembered he didn't like it when his daddy did it to him once in a blue moon when he was a kid circa the 1860/70s... Give. me. a. break.

Update, 11/28/2021:

The new Homecoming movie on CW tonight was a lot better than I thought it would be, but I confess my expectations were pretty low. I mean, let's be honest here. Whenever anyone tries to remake something, there's a 98% chance they're going to screw it up. And they did mess it up, but it wasn't so bad that I couldn't watch it. In fact, I might even get the DVD to add to my Christmas collection. It actually improved on a couple of things, such as making the sibling interactions more believable... Well, some of them. However, these Waltons are even more progressive and forward-thinking than their 1970s counterparts, and the plot went from mere fiction to outright fantasy with respect to race relations. (A white family rolling up into a black church for the Christmas Eve service in 1933 Appalachia. PUH-LEASE! At least the director had the black people at the back of the bus even if John went and joined them. If they'd been scattered about, I might've had to throw in the towel.) I won't rehash the rest of the race relation stuff here since I discuss it below. That's what The Waltons was all about, though: something to make you feel good even if it required major suspension of disbelief. E.G.: the episode where Jason is shocked to discover some music festival organizers won't let his friend Josh play because he's black... How can you live in the mountains of Virginia for 20+ years in the early 20th century and not see that coming?

Anyway, if you're a fan of the original movie/show, you'd probably enjoy the new movie as well, but the book is better than both of them because it contains historic honesty.

Original review, 12/27/2018:

I need to clear up something before I hit the actual review (which I've marked below if you want to skip to it). I always thought Earl Hamner, Jr. was an accidental author, and it was due to a couple of scenes in the movie based on this book. (The movie was also the basis for the TV show The Waltons.) The sensibilities of the 1970's demanded that said scenes be cleaned up for the made-for-TV public, so you have to read between the lines to catch it. Fortunately I've been blessed with the gift of sight, and I will spell it all out for you.

John-Boy (aka Clay-Boy in the book, aka Earl Hamner, Jr. in real life... I wonder if he was called Earl-Boy as a child? That would be unfortunate.) Anyway, John-Boy (Earl) likes to go up to his room and lock his door. Occasionally his mother Olivia goes upstairs, tells him to open up, then grills him about what he's doing up in his room behind a locked door and why it takes him so long to open it. She eventually notices something might be hiding under his mattress and asks him about it... Now, I know John-Boy is Olivia's first child, but surely the father could've explained at some point that most 15-year-old boys have a preternatural fascination with their tallywhackers, and that you really ought to just let the boy be if he feels the need to hide for a bit. But nooooo. Olivia just has to pester him about it, so John-Boy spins this yarn about writing all kinds of things down in a tablet which he, ahem, hides under his mattress. Of course, we all know the tablet is just a decoy used to cover whatever passed for pud-pulling periodicals during the great depression. He talks about wanting to be a writer, and Olivia says "I do declare! Well, we'll talk about that later. Right now you have to go (do some other plot stuff)," and John-Boy is saved the necessity of explaining that he was actually trying to flog his log. But now he's in a pickle since he's unwittingly committed himself to becoming a writer, and that's how we got this book. QED: he's an accidental author. If he'd only had the courage to be forthright with his mother, he would've been able to pursue his true passion: basket weaving.

I swear all of that is true, or my name isn't Pierce-Boy.

I must confess that John-Boy's conversation with his mother is not one I would ever willingly have with my own, but mine had the grace not to pursue the matter if she knocked on my door and received the answer "reading" to her "what are you doing" query. I would also like for the record to show that I always was reading and never lied about it. (I had put a sticker with words on it on the desk by my bed, and I always cast my eye over it before giving my answer. We must always be truthful even if we're not being entirely honest. Learn that lesson well, and you too could have a successful career in politics, law, or the media. [12/27/21 update: That was true in 2018, but as of 2020, politicians and the media can now get away with outright, bald-faced lies with impunity.]) And we should all be thankful that mama Pierce didn't get pushy, or I might've had to fabricate my own writing ruse, then I'd be stuck writing all the time instead of dedicating my life to the much nobler calling of putting away folders for an accounting firm.

Something resembling a review starts here:

First, let me point out who's who since all the kids have different names in the book than they do on the show. Some of this is guesswork, and I don't suppose it's all that important since most of the kids are minor, background characters, but I couldn't find this information on the internet, and it's time somebody took care of that.



There are eight kids in the book and seven in the show, so alas for poor Matt, a middle brother who never made it to prime time, though there was one episode where Jim-Bob discovers he had a twin brother who died in childbirth, so I guess that could be Matt (Joseph in the show). The first name is the book character, and I think there's evidence here that Earl may have been a fan of the gospels.

Clay-Boy - John-Boy
John - Jason
Becky - Mary Ellen
Mark - Ben
Shirley - Erin
Luke - Jim-Bob
Pattie-Cake - Elizabeth


"Patty cake... Patty cake! I don't believe it! Patty cake, Patty cake... It's not true!"

Yep, I'm afraid so, but that kind of name isn't too odd for that neck of the woods. Hell, I had a family of relatives named Ladybug, Piedmont, Tootsie, Kittycome, and Hazel, so I've no room to judge. They were all siblings, and I know Hazel isn't that odd of a name. She was the youngest and got a more normal name because their mother chose it. She had gotten tired of the father picking names because he obviously didn't know what he was doing.

This book was surprisingly good. I'm a fan of the TV show (at least the first five or six seasons before they start getting too retarded), and Earl Hamner, Jr. does the intro and outro voice-overs. Those can get quite flowery just like Doc Boy's blessing in the Garfield Christmas Special.


"Lord, we just want to tell you - how grateful we are for this food. And, um... for letting us all be here together - on Christmas Eve... And as surely, as the waters of the streams and the rivers find the sea, let each of us find happiness and wisdom in this hour..." (I don't know how the prayer was supposed to end because Doc-Boy's grandmother conks him on the head to shut him up at this point. And what is with "boy" being added to the end of all these names?)

I assumed purple prose was just Hamner's style, so that's what I expected to find all over this book, but it was minimal. In fact, going into this I thought it was going to end up on my "liked movie better" shelf, but it didn't even come close to landing there. That's partly because I love the movie and watch it every Christmas, and I intend to continue that tradition, but the book was definitely better. The book adds a healthy dose of reality that's absent in the film and the subsequent TV show. The children are nowhere near as goody-two-shoes about everything; Clay-Boy sneaks a cigarette when he can and actually gets a bit tiddly on eggnog fortified with bootleg whiskey (though he doesn't know it's happening since it's his first experience with alcohol); he hunts and has no qualms killing game to provide food for the family because, hello, he's been exposed to that since birth and is living in the middle of the Great Depression; Clay-Boy and Becky squabble constantly like 15 and 13-year-old siblings are supposed to, and there's no heart-to-heart between them about puberty while Clay-Boy milks the cow; Clay, Sr. often drinks (though not at home), smokes, and plays pool; Olivia doesn't get quite as upset about these things because she knows a lost cause when she sees it; the sheriff is more of a dick and treats his prisoner like an actual prisoner; etc. Furthermore, I can believe that every character in this grew up in the mountains of Virginia during the great depression, and that's something I can't say for their TV counterparts who are incredibly naive about a lot of things.

This is especially noticeable when race relations get involved. Hawthorne (a black man) picking up extra work helping the Baldwin sisters is within the realm of possibility, but his son Claudie going to the Walton's house to tell them a missionary lady is handing out presents at the store? Still possible, but you're really pushing it. Then Claudie being allowed to participate in that gathering with all the other white kids? Way into the red zone now. Then John-Boy just wandering into the negro church during the middle of the Christmas Eve service and sitting down with the congregation, and joining in with the singing, and nobody batting an eye as if this happened everyday? Sorry, I gotta call it.



It's a lovely sentiment, but that simply did not happen in the mountains of Virginia in the 1930's. I don't think it happened anywhere in America back then, though I could be wrong there. But Schuyler (pronounced SKY-ler), VA? Not a chance. Shit, that kind of behavior in the blue ridge mountains will still earn you at least a few arched eyebrows in 2018! The show came out in 1971 on the heels of the Civil Rights movement, and some revisionist history was going on, so we'll just have to ignore it. Luckily all those scenes were different in the book. . I was expecting the book to be just as ridiculous with that kind of stuff as the show, but it wasn't, and I can't for the life of me figure why they made such changes with the movie. I guess that's just Hollywood for you.

Since I'm poking fun at Hollywood, here's another thing. I've spent a lot of time in the mountains of Virginia, and I have never seen anything resembling this:



The show purports that it's part of Appalachia, but don't you believe it. It's a California mountain, (part of Hollywood Hills), and any landscape in Virginia that looks like this ought to explain itself.

One last thing which is apropos of nothing in this book, but I feel like sharing it anyway since it relates to the Waltons. I tend to play a game in my head when I see some new-fangled geegaw, hear a new style of music, see something in a movie which shows that decency and propriety have suffered another blow, or see any other sign that the times have changed again, and that's "I wonder what grandma Walton would make of that?"


"Good Lord!"

Yep, that's normally the answer that pops up in my head. I don't know why I'm so concerned about her opinion, but there it is. I suggest giving it a try yourself; the ensuing conversation/diatribe can be kind of fun, but I guess it would only work with people who are really familiar with the character.

This book won't appeal to a wide audience, but it's short, well-written, humorous, fun, touching, and paints a pretty accurate picture of life in the Blue Ridge mountains during the 1930's. Highly recommended to people who enjoy simple, backwoods stories.
Profile Image for ~mad.
903 reviews21 followers
December 24, 2016
Ive read this book before and love anything "Walton's Mountain/Spencer's Mountain" written by the original John Boy!

I have been looking all over my house for this book for like the last FIVE Christmas's and just stumbled across it this month!
YAY ME!

I recommend highly!
Profile Image for Ivan.
752 reviews15 followers
February 11, 2014
From the first time I saw "The Homecoming" on television when I was a small boy I've considered it one of my most favorite Christmas films. Somewhere along the years I realized that the film was based on a book, but I never read it until now. I can't recommend it enough. The sense of family and home and the love of same is present on every page. The story differs from the film - names have changed - Clay-boy is more familiar to most of us as John-boy, and the family name here is Spencer and not Walton. However, the essence of the source material has been captured. It's Christmas and Clay Spencer hasn't arrived home yet and a blizzard is on the way. Oldest son Clay-boy is sent to find his father and bring him home. It's an odyssey. He runs into the sheriff, Ike Godsey and Charlie Sneeds (under arrest for poaching), he attends services at "the black church," and end up at the home of two elderly lady bootleggers who give him "recipe" and a ride home through the snow in a horse drawn sleigh. The book has a happy ending that doesn't seem at all forced or unreasonable and left this reader in tears. Capote's "A Christmas Memory" (and the 1966 TV film with Geraldine Page) remains my very favorite Christmas story, but this runs a very close second.
Profile Image for DJ.
181 reviews3 followers
October 6, 2018
I believe this was the basis for The Waltons TV Show.
Profile Image for Ron Popp.
189 reviews1 follower
December 12, 2021
Under rated. A very sweet story written in a clear poetic tone
211 reviews7 followers
December 19, 2018
I am a huge fan of the television series, but have never read the source material until now. I should state that I love the 1st seasons of the TV show, as it obviously lost the plot as the years went on. This book is very faithful to the descriptive ness of the author. He has an obvious love for the countryside and nature surrounding the area he grew up in period some of the characters were a little more rough and I actually think they did well by Tony knows down a little for the movie. A very enjoyable read though!
Profile Image for Hannah Guerrero.
106 reviews33 followers
July 11, 2019
This was a sweet little tale. I could definitely read this every year around Christmas and not grow tired of it.
Profile Image for Charlsa.
572 reviews26 followers
October 21, 2018
I had never read this book even though it's been on my shelf for 20 years. I finally picked it up because one of the popsugar prompt for 2018 is to read a book by an author whose first or last name is the same as yours. I loved this little book. It's comforting and hopeful and full of joy and love. It puts me in the mood for Christmas.
Profile Image for Jim.
262 reviews
July 27, 2018
This book started out for me like one of John-Boy's stories ... full of promise, a little stiff and very self aware.
All of us older folks remember The Waltons and I was comparing the descriptions of family members to their TV counterparts and trying to match them up - until I realized there was an extra kid in here!
The story unfolds slowly, considering the brevity of the book but it really is worth the time.

The old ladies who sell their papa's recipe, the worry over a father who may or may not arrive in time for Christmas, the little girl who cries over a cracked doll... all these little moments adding up to a sweet, finely drawn tale.

I enjoyed the look into Clay-Boy's mind, the description of a nighttime sleigh ride and a Christmas Eve visit to a black church where he realizes with great sadness that there are whole societies within his own that he does not know and may never be a part of.

The ending is predictable but so is the one in A Christmas Carol and I read that one every year! I think I will make a new tradition of reading this one as well.
Profile Image for Katy.
1,428 reviews6 followers
September 18, 2018
A really short novella based on the Spencers of Virginia and one Christmas when. Pa was coming homeroom a job in another town. However, John-Boy goes out to find Pa, only to be lost.

These stores are the basis for the old TV favorite, "Walton's Mountain." It took me so long to read because I kept leaving it in places where I was NOT!
Profile Image for Carol.
641 reviews
April 14, 2016
I loved The Waltons television show and Spencer's Mountain is one of my favorite movies, so when I saw this book on the shelf at the library I just had to read it. And the story did not disappoint. This was a nice quick holiday read. If you've seen the TV show or the movie, no surprises here.
Profile Image for David.
104 reviews8 followers
December 19, 2023
The last 5-6 pages or so were tough going ... some kind of salty discharge from my eyes kept clouding my vision.
Profile Image for Tina.
1,069 reviews31 followers
December 13, 2021
I am aging myself by reading this book that inspired The Waltons television show. I don't care, I think I want to bake Olivia's applesauce cake with whiskey frosting.
Profile Image for Cathy.
1,691 reviews8 followers
March 8, 2022
What a fun, short read. Our family loved "The Waltons". It was clean, whole family viewing. Not many shows on TV like this today.
Profile Image for Jeff.
57 reviews1 follower
December 22, 2017
It's Christmas Eve, 1933, on Spencer's mountain and Olivia Spencer along with her eight "thoroughbred" children, anxiously await their father's homecoming. With old man Winter wreaking one of his best, life goes on despite the trials and tribulations of life during the Great Depression, not to mention their apprehension that shakes each of them to the core, especially Olivia.

"The Homecoming" is a heartwarming story about that Christmas Eve day on Spencer Mountain that welcomes us into their daily lives; the chores, the childhood rivalry, the festive preparations including a harrowing encounter with an aggressive buck who's determined but thankfully fails to attack Clay-boy while he's searching for that perfect Christmas tree, the quest for the patriarch Clay, and finally a Christmas miracle at midnight. What the family didn't expect was the real miracle that followed.

Originally published in 1970 by Earl Hamner, Jr., CBS realized its potential and produced and aired the movie in 1971, not only with subtle changes to character's names but launching a franchise that America would come to know and love as the "The Waltons." If you've never seen the movie or the book, I recommend both, especially during the holidays! "The Homecoming" will fill your heart with love and the spirit of the season!
Profile Image for Sandy Bielinski-Rice.
34 reviews2 followers
December 30, 2018
I fell in love with Earl Hamner, Jr. listening to him narrate The Walton’s. The Walton’s https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wal... was a television show based on the book "The Homecoming" that started in the 1970s. The show told the story of a family during the Great Depression. The oldest son on the show was named John-Boy, John after his father. In the book, the character is called Clay-boy. I enjoyed all the characters in the book and on the show. The book: The Homecoming: a novel about Spencer’s Mountain is one I have always wanted to read. Great Christmas story. If you enjoy historical fiction and want a glimpse of what it was like to live in the 1930s, this is the story for you. Check out this cool video with Richard Thomas talking about playing John-boy. https://youtu.be/k9RNSDC5zBg
Profile Image for Carol.
202 reviews1 follower
December 18, 2021
I’m a huge fan of The Homecoming, The 1970 TV version that was the reason The Waltons was made into a series. I loved it! It was one of the shows I could watch with my elderly Mother and not cringe because it was a clean, decent show and she could relate.

I enjoyed this book. It is NOT The Waltons and readers need to not expect it to be the same as the original TV movie.

The TV movie is better, which just means that a group of editors and writers added to the truth to make it more appealing to watch.

Reading it, you did feel the true story. It was well written and easily read. I read it in less than an hour, but I truly am a very fast reader and I enjoyed it very much.

It’s NOT The Homecoming you have watched every Christmas, but it makes you smile and you feel the love.
Profile Image for Laurie Wheeler.
557 reviews7 followers
December 14, 2022
This book inspired the movie which was the pilot for the tv show. Parts of the book are like the movie, other parts are not.
Some parts that are different from the tv movie are like the earlier movie and book, Spencers Mountain.
Earl Hamner had no control over the first movie, Spencers Mountain, unlike The Homecoming .
With The Homecoming movie, Hamner wrote the screenplay, which is much better than the book.
Admittedly Hamner wrote both of his bokks well enough to glean movies made with famed Hollywood stars. Spencers Mountain stars Henry Fonda and Maureen O'Hara while The Homecoming stars Patricia O'Neal.
The screenplay paved the way to a successful television series with which Hamner was very much unvolved.
Profile Image for Lee Tyner.
185 reviews
June 13, 2020
This is a Prequel NOT a Sequel

I don’t know why it’s listed as a sequel to Spencer’s Mountain. It takes place beforehand which is evident by the characters’ ages, which kids had not been born, and who was still alive. Also, there were a few passages that were near copy/pastes from Spencer’s Mountain.

The story itself was very simple and should have been two chapters rather than a novella. It was OK, but not as captivating as Spencer’s Mountain. Too simple and redundant.
103 reviews2 followers
November 29, 2022
Love The Homecoming

I loved the Homecoming movie and the Waltons. I miss this show. I wish we could get more shows with values on television again. It is dearly needed. I loved reading this story and I will read the other Waltons book as well. Reading the Homecoming brought back great memories of watching this wonderful show with family when I was growing up. I loved the characters, the location and the plot lines. I will be looking for the Waltons on TV again as well. Thanking you Earl Hamner for bringing us your story through your books and TV.
Profile Image for Julie.
202 reviews36 followers
December 24, 2017
I think I’ve found a new Christmas tradition to read The Homecoming every year! This is such a perfect, heartwarming Christmas story set during The Great Depression. I loved every moment and being swept back to simpler (though more stressful) times. I’m all about slowing down, savoring time with my family, and this book is just the thing I needed calm my anxiety, and keep Christmas in perspective.
41 reviews3 followers
March 20, 2020
Charming book about rural Virginia during the Depression. The dialogue sounds like the people of rural Virginia and North Carolina. His descriptions are wonderful and the images swirl in my head. He is telling a coming of age story about Clay Boy Spencer and finding his father on Christmas Eve. It is similar to "The Homecoming" movie from the 1970's, but enough differences to make it an interesting and entertaining read.
Profile Image for Marti Martinson.
331 reviews6 followers
February 19, 2021
Holy crap, what a quick read. Effortless to read, but the care with which the author wrote it is evident. Having seen the pilot movie and the TV series, it is too hard NOT to make comparisons. Still, taking it as a stand-alone text, the scenery, the characterizations, the plot, and the dialogue are masterfully done. I see nothing wrong with sentimentality.

The one nickname of the daughter "Patty Cake" was a bit much, though.

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