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I very much enjoyed the other Jane Smiley book I’d read (A Thousand Acres). Not anyone would be able to pull off a King Lear retelling set in Iowa in the 1980s. But she did. So when I had a chance to pick up this book, Moo, cheap at a thrift shop, I bought it instantly.

I had a hard time getting into this story about budget cuts at a Midwestern university, though. Though somewhat hard to keep straight at first, the characters were interesting. In fact, some of the penetrating insights into human nature astounded me. The problem, I think, was in the narration. It was as flat as the plains themselves—too detached to allow you to get attached to the breathtakingly-drawn characters. And although I can see how a detached narrative style played into her overall themes, it didn’t help me as a reader to care as much as I could have.

If I hadn’t read A Thousand Acres first I would have been scared to try it after this book. Not that it was a bad book. Just rather slow-paced, like the Midwest itself. Just don’t approach it like a high-volume page-turner. Even better, approach A Thousand Acres instead—it’s a better introduction to what Smiley can really do with the Midwest.



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