Carrie Schmidt's Reviews > The Color of Home

The Color of Home by Kit Tosello
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it was amazing
bookshelves: best-of-2024, blog-reviewed, christian-fiction, clean-fiction, contemporary, family-ties, heroine-addict, i-love-to-laugh, romantic-fiction, small-towns, the-feels
Read 2 times. Last read September 23, 2024.

4.5 stars

“The unexpected life IS our actual life.”

Oh!! Y’all!! I adored everything about Kit Tosello’s stellar debut novel, The Color of Home. Usually I give a lot of grace to debut novels because … well… when I go back and look at my first blog posts I realize that a whole lot of people gave me a whole lot of grace (how about a purchase link somewhere, Carrie? anywhere?) But The Color of Home needs no grace from me – it is everything delightful and winsome, and it just wrapped me up, heart and soul.

I provide Tawny with the thumbnail version, up to but not including the part where I ran into Cade, and altogether omitting the part where I zoned out for an hour scrolling through Bob Ross memes. Which was worth it, if only for “Ever make mistakes in life? Let’s make them birds. Yeah, they’re birds now.”

Tosello’s charming first person narratives (alternating between Audrey and her great-aunt Daisy) feel deliciously conversational, giving off a wonderful vibe of ‘Audrey (or Daisy) is telling me this part of the story while we’re seated around their kitchen table with a mug of tea’. Their personalities and relatability leap immediately off the pages and burrow deeply into your heart as the story progresses, a testament to the author’s effortless skill in the art of ‘showing vs. telling’ – also evident in how we easily come to know the other characters through their interactions with these two narrators. And even though this novel wrestles with some tough subjects – like Alzheimer’s, grief, incarceration, career pressures, etc – the tone of Tosello’s writing voice achieves the perfect balance between humor and hard … in large part, i think, because it allows for humor within the hard without diminishing the impact of either one.

“Grief isn’t something you move past, ever. It’s something you learn to carry.. And honey, we have got to allow our disappointments to draw us closer to God, not give us an excuse to drift further away.”

Bottom Line: Is ‘home’ only a residence? Can it also be a sense of place? A memory? Or maybe it can also be an inspired calling, a place where we come alive, a Divine embrace, a redeemed life, a second chance. In The Color of Home, debut novelist Kit Tosello explores these nuanced layers with sacred insight and oodles of charm. I fell head over heels in love with Charity Falls (dare I hope we can return for another visit??), as well as Audrey, Daisy, Dean, Cade, Nash, Paige, Tawny, and so many other endearing and vividly-sketched characters who started out as strangers to me but quickly became the dearest of friends. Faith is presented naturally as a meaningful extension of what’s going on in the story, and the attraction between Cade and Audrey is the icing on the cake. I cannot wait to read more books by Kit Tosello, and if you’re a fan of Cynthia Ruchti, Amanda Cox, Angela Ruth Strong, Holly Varni, and Katie Powner, you absolutely need to make sure The Color of Home is at the top of your TBR list!

(I voluntarily reviewed a complimentary copy of this book)

first reviewed (with full disclosure) at Reading Is My SuperPower
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Reading Progress

Finished Reading
September 23, 2024 – Started Reading
September 23, 2024 – Finished Reading
September 29, 2024 – Shelved
September 29, 2024 – Shelved as: best-of-2024
September 29, 2024 – Shelved as: blog-reviewed
September 29, 2024 – Shelved as: christian-fiction
September 29, 2024 – Shelved as: clean-fiction
September 29, 2024 – Shelved as: contemporary
September 29, 2024 – Shelved as: family-ties
September 29, 2024 – Shelved as: heroine-addict
September 29, 2024 – Shelved as: i-love-to-laugh
September 29, 2024 – Shelved as: romantic-fiction
September 29, 2024 – Shelved as: small-towns
September 29, 2024 – Shelved as: the-feels

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