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Letters to Bizzy
Letters to Bizzy | John M. Tabor
1 post | 1 read
Letters to Bizzy finds a man, John Tibbits, past his prime staring down the barrel of old age, having to come to grips with his mother’s death and regrettable fact his dysfunctional youth has burdened him with a lifetime of unwelcome baggage. As he sorts through his mother’s personal effects he discovers boxes of unopened letters written some 50 years earlier from a man, Robert Guthrie, to his daughter, Bizzy. They tell the story of a life lived on a barrier island off the coast of North Carolina, Bogue Banks. There is nothing sensational in the telling, average by most accounts. However, through the eyes of Robert Guthrie we come to see beauty in the tragic, humor in the absurd, and sensitivity from the susceptible. It is in fact an apologetic to the ordinary lives we live. Those of John Tibbits and Robert Guthrie are inexplicably intertwined; and, it is only until the end, do we learn how. For both it is a journey through their own private battles.
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JenniferdeBie
Letters to Bizzy | John M. Tabor

Written with an ear toward regional dialect, and an obvious intimate familiarity with the North Carolina coast, its history, and the people who make it special, Letters to Bizzy slips by as easy as an ocean-side afternoon. Funny at times, heartbreaking at others, I can only be grateful that Tabor gave me the chance to spend a little time on Bogue Banks with Robert and his neighbors; hours spent with them isn‘t time I‘ll forget any time soon.