Rosalyn Ebberly is the self-righteous moderator (her e-mail address is a tip-off) who, although exaggerated, will be recognizable to anyone who has ever regularly attended church. Perhaps the otherSAHM I AMers can teach these two something about sisterhood.Ĭan a novel consisting entirely of e-mails be enjoyable faith fiction? Efken's charming, light debut offers a resounding and surprising "yes." Several stay-at-home moms (the "SAHM" of the title) from across the country become friends and confidantes through an e-mail chat group. Indiscretions: However youthful, they can come back to haunt you,learns pastor's wife Phyllis Lorimer.Amends: These could stand to be made between officious list moderatorRosalyn Ebberly and her pampered sister, Veronica. Motherhood: Teen-mom-turned-farmer's-wife Brenna Lindberg can dealwith the mud and the chickens, but what about her husband's desire fora child of his own? Health: Surely aches and pains are normal in an active little boy, yetthose of soccer-mom Jocelyn Millard's son don't seem to be going away. It's hard to love someone in sickness and in health whenhe's never home!Īrt: Let the children express themselves, opines artistic ZeliaMuzuwa, and then her son's head gets stuck inside a kitty scratchingpost… Success: Her workaholic husband is driving Dulcie Huckleberry aroundthe bend. But where else couldthey discuss things like… For the members of a stay-at-home-moms' e-mail loop, lunch withfriends is a sandwich in front of the computer.
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