Growing up, Bill Holm knew what failure was: "to die in Minneota." But
after returning to his hometown ("a very small dot on an ocean of
grass") after 20 years' absence, he wasn't so sure.
Finding pleasure in the customs and characters of small-town life, in
The Heart Can Be Filled Anywhere on Earth he writes with affection
about the town elders, seen by those in the outside world as misfits and
losers.
"They taught me what to value, what to ignore, what to embrace, and what
to resist."
In his trek through the heartland, Holm covers a satisfyingly wide
emotional terrain, from scandalous affairs in the 1950s to his aunt's
touching attempts to transcend poverty with perfume and movie-star airs.