


So, with some virtuoso snooping, Will discovers some odd facts about the May/December union-the biggest shocker being that Miss Love is wife in name only, having wed, as she had honestly explained to her suitor, only for a home of her own. Suddenly there's rollicking music coming from the parlor piano the lively Miss Love trims Grandpa's beard there's a trip to New York for both Miss Love talks him into buying an automobile-and even selling the delightful driving machines! But, though Grandpa's a new man while Miss Love is admired for her cultured talk and admirable headgear, family and neighbors are appalled. (After all, ""She's dead as she'll ever be, ain't she?"") And Will watches as Grandpa-fabled one-punch fighter, Confederate vet, owner/operator of a General Merchandise emporium, stingy autocrat-changes under the influence of his new bride. The narrator is 14-year-old Will Tweedy, who's on hand when his Grandpa announces to daughters Mary Willis (Will's Ma) and Aunt Lamia the news about his upcoming wedding-no disrespect to departed Grandma intended. A folksy, foxy down-Georgia-way tale, lubricated with tangy 1906 dialect-all about the scandalizing' and gaskin' that goes on in the town of Cold Sassy when one-armed Grandpa Blakeslee (a new widower) up and marries pretty, 30-ouch milliner Miss Love Simpson.
