After Hours
After Hours at the Almost Home

Tara Yellen

Reviewed by Wendy Runyon

Tara Yellen’s After Hours at the Almost Home is a day in the life type novel, set in the Almost Home Bar and Grill in Denver, Colorado. It is a cold and snowy day in January, Super Bowl Sunday as a matter of fact, and the Almost Home is jam-packed with customers from all walks of life, including the down and out regulars like India, a storyteller who can tell your fortune. Business is hopping when young JJ begins her first shift.  She is immediately caught up in the whirlwind of the bustling restaurant, trying to keep everything straight, at times failing miserably.  This is a fresh start for the young woman, however, and she is determined to make it work and to fit in.

Understaffed and dealing with the hole the bartender created when she walked out unannounced and an inexperienced trainee on the floor, the wait staff at the Almost Home are struggling as best they can on one of the busiest days of the year.  Amidst the hustle and bustle, the loud voices, the game in the background, the orders coming in and being delivered to the tables, Tara Yellen transports the reader into the middle of that bar and grill where it all comes to life.  When the customers are gone and the last of the closing chores are done, the wait staff are able to relax and unwind after a hard day and night of work. 

Bit by bit, the author introduces the reader to the characters, peeling back the layers of their lives as they work, interact with each other and recall snatches of their past.  The characters are ordinary people with every day hopes and fears, always wishing and dreaming for something more.  The staff seem in their element while working, at the same time trying to forget their realities for a short while but never quite succeeding.  A cloud of loneliness and heartache hangs over each of them.  They hurt each other, love each other and are almost always drawn to each other.

There is Colleen, a widow struggling to come to terms with the death of her husband two years ago, and Colleen’s fourteen year old daughter, Lily, the most vulnerable of all and yet also one of the strongest, who is much too grown up and yet still very naive, wanting only to get out and away.  There is Lena who likes to take charge and puts on airs of a confidence she does not really possess; Keith, who longs for something different and wears his heart on his sleeve; Denny who is down and out on love, always the cool one; and Marna, a free spirit, who is ever present in the Almost Home, even when she is not really there at all.  Tara Yellen breathes life into her characters, capturing their doubts, fears and hopes.  At some point in our lives, haven’t most of us felt exhausted of life, surviving as best we can, wanting and wishing for more? 

The Almost Home is almost home for many of the characters. Their coworkers are their family.   I could not help but feel a part of the family too as I reached the last page of the novel.  Tara Yellen is a talented writer.  After Hours at the Almost Home is not without its disturbing moments nor is it a happy story.  It is a day in the life story about ordinary people struggling to get by, disappointed with life and yet hoping for more.
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