I waited quite a while for this book. I read the review in the New York Times (http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/30/books/gone-girl-by-gillian-flynn.html) and was really excited to read it. And I was not disappointed. It was a psychological thriller that has twists and turns in each and every chapter. And some of them are short!
Her writing is really amazing. Ms. Flynn is a gifted writer. On the one hand, I wanted to race through the book to follow the intrigue and drama; on the other hand, I wanted to savor her writing and her deep probing into the minds of these characters. The book is written in the first person from the point of view of the two protagonists: Amy and Nick. They are a married couple who are "celebrating" their fifth anniversary at the opening of the book. But that same day, Amy disappears. I don't want to give anything away, but will say that both of the characters have dark sides that are revealed slowly over time, so that the characters that you meet in the first 50 pages are very different people than those described on the following pages.
I raced through this book in just a couple days, which I am sure is the case with many of the readers.
What will hold me like this book next? It's a tough act to follow!
Have been keeping this blog since 2008! It's a place to keep track of what I've read.
Monday, July 23, 2012
Sunday, July 15, 2012
Only Time Will Tell by Jeffrey Archer
Jeffrey Archer is a great storyteller. I still recall reading As the Crow Flies quite a while ago and remember it as a book you just want to read and read until you get to the end. His storytelling is fantastic. I read more than half of the book today because I couldn't wait to finish it.
I certainly don't think it's great literature, but it is good storytelling. There are cliches galore, but they didn't really bother me. It was an easy read....I could read it at the gym, in the car, just about anywhere. I didn't have to THINK much when reading it. That is usually a problem for me; I set my standards too high. But once in a while you need this kind of reading and writing. And now I have done two of them in quick succession (The Shoemaker's Wife)!
Archer tells family stories....at least that is my sense of his writing. In this book he tells the tale of Arthur Clifton, son of a dockworker (or aristocrat - his mother having had a one night stand shortly before her marriage to Arthur's father).
The paternity issue is the major plot element in the book. There are secrets galore, plot twists and a real zinger at the end that leaves you really wanting to get the next book in the series. And yes, I will undoubtedly fall for it and reserve it at the Library. (I would NOT purchase the book.)
Some of the characters are cliche and stereotypes, but I put up with all of it because I liked the fact that I was really involved in good storytelling!
I certainly don't think it's great literature, but it is good storytelling. There are cliches galore, but they didn't really bother me. It was an easy read....I could read it at the gym, in the car, just about anywhere. I didn't have to THINK much when reading it. That is usually a problem for me; I set my standards too high. But once in a while you need this kind of reading and writing. And now I have done two of them in quick succession (The Shoemaker's Wife)!
Archer tells family stories....at least that is my sense of his writing. In this book he tells the tale of Arthur Clifton, son of a dockworker (or aristocrat - his mother having had a one night stand shortly before her marriage to Arthur's father).
The paternity issue is the major plot element in the book. There are secrets galore, plot twists and a real zinger at the end that leaves you really wanting to get the next book in the series. And yes, I will undoubtedly fall for it and reserve it at the Library. (I would NOT purchase the book.)
Some of the characters are cliche and stereotypes, but I put up with all of it because I liked the fact that I was really involved in good storytelling!
Sunday, July 8, 2012
The Newlyweds by Nell Freudenberger
First off, I LOVE the cover of this book. You see the image here. It is simple, straightforward and doesn't classify this book as "chick lit." And it's not!
It's a story of a Bangladeshi woman, Amina who at age 24 moves to Rochester, NY to marry George, a civil engineer, who she met online.
This marriage offers a chance for a new life for both of them. But the complications of marriage and emotion challenge the relationship.
Amina's parents are one challenge. They live in Bangladesh and have major family issues to deal with. Cultural differences play a major part in this book and that is one reason why it is so engaging. George and Amina come from such different families and places; their union is challenged before it even begins. It is "understood" that Amina's parents will come and live with them in their house in Rochester once the marriage is complete and her citizenship in place. That is simply "the way" that Deshi families live. But not so with American families!
The family stories here are rich and varied; both the American and Deshi families are described in depth, giving the reader an insight into life in the two very different life styles.
September 11 figures in the story but only indirectly; I was surprised, actually, that it was not a bigger part of the rift between Amina and George.
In summary, this was a great novel and I would highly recommend it.
Sunday, July 1, 2012
The Shoemaker's Wife by Adriana Trigiana
This was just the book I needed the week that school ended for students and teachers .... an entertaining, engaging family saga that really constitutes "summer reading." I enjoyed reading it and found myself wanting to pick it up at all times of the day.
The story starts in Northern Italy, with two brothers being dropped off at a convent by their mother, recently widowed, because she can't take care of them herself. They are raised by the nuns and are "good boys" but very different. One ends up in the priesthood, while the other moves to America at the turn of the century, to find his fortune (and following in the path of his lost father, who moved to America to earn money for the family, back in Italy).
I learned later that this story was written as an homage to the author's grandparents, who met much the same way that the two main protagonists, Enza and Ciro, meet in the book.The story starts in Northern Italy, with two brothers being dropped off at a convent by their mother, recently widowed, because she can't take care of them herself. They are raised by the nuns and are "good boys" but very different. One ends up in the priesthood, while the other moves to America at the turn of the century, to find his fortune (and following in the path of his lost father, who moved to America to earn money for the family, back in Italy).
Although the book does resort to some conventions and is predictable in many ways, I am not complaining at all. It's well written, the characters are well developed, and it weaves fact and fiction in an interesting manner. I really do love novels that explore immigrants' experience in America and this was a version I had not read before. I have read so many about Jewish families coming to American to escape persecution, Irish families coming to escape poverty, Indian families coming for a better life...but I hadn't experienced the Italian family saga before...at least I can't recall a novel like this.
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