Showing posts with label Sagas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sagas. Show all posts

11/08/2009

Review of Fork in the Road (Paperback)

It's been a week since I finished this book, and it's still in my mind every day.One of the best books I have ever read, period.I was mouthing aloud the Irish street dialogue as I was reading to savor it.So authentic.No one can accuse Hamill of shallow characters either;Gina Furey is only the most unforgettable character I have ever come across in fiction.

But this novel isn't merely a character study - it's also a tragedy, a love story, and bits of lough-out-loud hilarity.

The one warning, however, is that if you're offended by foul language, it'd be a good idea to stay away.I'm not offended by it at all, and believe it necessary in fact, as these characters would surely speak like this if it were reality.

The highest praise I can give this book is that I'm now reading it again, more slowly and carefully this time.That's something I've never done with any book.



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9/07/2009

Review of Sullivan's Island (Lowcountry Tales) (Paperback)

This is the first time I'm reviewing a book on Amazon, and I am apalled at the back and forth bickering between the bad reviews and the mostly rave reviews.I thought this book was simply...amazing.I loved DorotheaBenton Frank's writing style, her characters and her story.I read thisbook in two days, and that's only because I had started it right beforegoing to bed.I was so completely transported into a whole other world,away from the traffic noises and putrid smells of urban life, and smackright into the salty air of sea water and sweet pie smells in the ramblinghouse on Sullivan's Island.I felt like I was a part of the family, inthis great story.It's obvious that all the authors who gave anendorsement to this book felt the same way.Instead of ranting and ravingagainst them for giving their seal of approval, I am praising Pat Conroy,Bret Lott, Anne Rivers Siddons and Fern Michaels.They saw somethingspecial in this first-time author and they are completelly right.I wouldbuy Ms. Frank's next book in a heartbeat!I only hope it comes out soon,because I'm starting to feel restless in my urban environment again, and amin need of some good ole' southern comfort, 'eah!Much thanks to theauthor for giving her readers this wonderful debut novel!Keep themcoming!

Product Description
Set in the steamy, stormy landscape of South Carolina, Sullivan's Island tells the unforgettable story of one woman's courageous journey toward truth.

Born and raised on idyllic Sullivan's Island, Susan Hayes navigated through her turbulent childhood with humor, spunk, and characteristic Southern sass. But years later, she is a conflicted woman with an unfaithful husband, a sometimes resentful teenage daughter, and a heart that aches with painful, poignant memories. And as Susan faces her uncertain future, she realizes that she must go back to her past. To the beachfront house where her sister welcomes her with open arms. To the only place she can truly call home.

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9/06/2009

Review of Peace Like a River (Paperback)

I've had to re-write this review three times because the first drafts made me sound like a gushing, blushing school girl.That's how enamored of this novel I am. Leif Enger's "Peace Like A River" is the story of the Land family set in the early 1960's in rural Minnesota:Jeremiah the father, Davy the eldest son, Reuben, 11 yrs old and the novel's narrator, and Swede, daughter and sister, verse writer and an "Old West" afficianado.The story itself is simple: Davy kills two young men who have broken into the Land home, is put on trial for murder and escapes jail when it seems he is to be convicted.Obviously this turns the Land Family upside down and the bulk of the novel is concerned with finding Davy and forging, through necessity, a new life for all. The novel begins with the birth of Reuben, who appears stillborn until Jeremiah enters the operating room: "As mother cried out. Dad turned back to me, a clay child wrapped in a canvas coat, and said in a normal voice, "Reuben Land, in the name of the living God I am telling you to breathe."And so begins the first of the "miracles" which occur throughout this novel. And no, this is not a religious novel per se though faith is very important to the Land family, Jeremiah is particular. And Leif Enger is not only concerned with the hereafter, he's also very aware of the here and now.I've never read a novel that mentions, explains, makes reference to such a disparate set of characters: Teddy Roosevelt, God, Jesus, Butch Cassidy, Robert Louis Stevenson, Bob and Cole Younger, Jesse James,Swanson chicken-in-a-can, "Moby Dick," Lewis and Clark, Moses, Natty Bumppo, Jonah ("...such a griper. Whine all day. Probably God sent the whale so He could get three days of peace and quiet."). And much more.Enger, obviously bursting with knowledge, makes these references out of a need and a love to inform and in the process inbues his characters with these same qualities ( As a contrast,in "American Psycho," Bret Easton Ellis makes ten times as many cultural references than does Enger but the effect is showy,coy and ultimately boring). There is also great Love and caring in "Peace Like a River."The Land's truly love each other with the kind of love that accepts, forgives and annoints themselves and each other as in holy communion.
"Peace Like A River" is energetic, magical and beautifully written in a style that can only be called gorgeous: "Was there ever a place you loved to go--your grandma's house, where you were a favorite child...and you arrived once as she lay in sickness? Remember how the light seemed wrong, and the adults off-key and the ambient and persistent joy you'd grown to expect in that place was gone, slipped off as the ghost slips the body?" "Peace like a River" can now take it's place among the pantheon of similar-themed novels:Barry Udall's "The Miracle Life of Edgar Mint," J.D. Salinger's "Catcher in the Rye" and Frank McCourt's "Angela's Ashes." Pretty good company...if you ask me.



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