Edmonton Journal

Bourne winners

Three sisters set out to save their town in One Two Three

- BETHANNE PATRICK

One Two Three

Laurie Frankel Henry Holt

In Laurie Frankel's new book, One Two Three, the Mitchell sisters, an unusual set of 16-year-old triplets, provide perspectiv­e on a town ravaged geographic­ally and psychicall­y by toxic chemical run-off in the local river. In chapters labelled according to sisterly voice (one is Mab, two is Monday, three is Mirabel), we learn that the sins of the father shall be visited on at least one son — and, depending on your perspectiv­e, on these three daughters, too.

Born in the small town of Bourne, the three sisters have three levels of ability. Mab is pretty, accomplish­ed and “normal;” Monday is pretty, focused and “on the spectrum;” and Mirabel is a beautiful genius who for unspecifie­d reasons uses a wheelchair and a computer-generated voice. Their father died of cancer before they were born, and their mother, Nora, works simultaneo­usly as the town barkeep and the town therapist. Along with Pastor Jeff, who is also a physician, “they corner, between them, each Bourner's holy trinity — Nora treats their minds, Jeff their bodies and souls.” Bourne is probably somewhere in New England but might be anywhere, really. For a nonfiction account of a place like it, read Mill Town, by Kerri Arsenault, set in Mexico, Maine.

Just as we're learning about the Bourners, their singularit­y and also their grit, a wrench is thrown in the works by the arrival of the Templeton family: Nathan, his wife, Apple, and their son, River — a ghastly name choice, given that his family is descended from Duke Templeton, owner and founder of Belsum Chemicals, which caused the town's desperate straits of cancer deaths, birth defects and economic devastatio­n. Nora began a class-action lawsuit when her daughters were infants but doesn't have sufficient admissible evidence to win it.

River's matriculat­ion at

Bourne Memorial High School causes a ruckus among the local youths, who early on give him regular beatings. But it also causes a ruckus in the hearts of the Mitchell sisters. They wrestle with their misgivings about this possible enemy in their midst until they befriend him and bring him on board in their mother's nearly lost cause to prove that Belsum has evil intentions for Bourne's remaining resources.

This would be a compelling plot told in a straightfo­rward manner. Told through the voices of Mab, Monday and Mirabel it becomes richer, funnier and more poignant.

Their adolescent ideas about their fellow residents (who include a wonderful elderly neighbour nicknamed Pooh), their hopes and dreams for their futures (Mirabel has no illusions about her own) and their determinat­ion to fight for justice make this one of the summer's freshest novels. One Two Three tells a more complicate­d story than its title implies, all the while reminding us that big changes can be made through small steps.

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