Tina Chaulk's first novel is deceptively funny and breezy,
contrasting 22-year-old Lisa's letters home to her parents in Aspen
Cove, Newfoundland, with the everyday reality of her life as a
job-hunting university graduate in Toronto. Much of the humour
comes from this contrast: Lisa is determined to put the best face
on her experiences for the folks at home, but the reality of life
in hot, crowded Toronto, working dead-end jobs and living with an
old friend who has undergone a radical image change.
The novel reads like chicklit, but I say it's "deceptively" light
because Lisa encounters some very serious and painful situations
during her years in Toronto, even though humour is never far from
the surface. Chaulk balances the humour and the heartbreak nicely
and leaves you really caring for the characters.
There are places where "this much is true" could have used better
editing, especially in the dialogue -- Lisa's narrative voice leaps
off the page with such energy that it's sometimes a letdown when
her voice, and those of the other characters, don't come through as
clearly in the dialogue. However, I highly recommend "this much is
true" as a quick read that will leave you laughing but also provide
a few moments of serious reflection. I'm looking forward to reading
more from Tina Chaulk.