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shellie

shellie

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  • member since September 28, 2012
  1. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die Shelf
    Cataract

    Zombie Kitten said: 2 stars

    Ok but I really didn't care for the writing style and found myself disiterested most of the time.


  2. 5 months ago | Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? Yes (0) | No (0)
  3. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die Shelf
    Crossfire

    Beverly R. said: 4 stars

    I hope to read more books by this author. Junko Aoki is a young woman who was born with an unusual ability--she can start fires simply by projecting energy. Luckily, her parents were very understanding and taught her various methods of controlling herself...

    Beverly R. said: 4 stars

    I hope to read more books by this author. Junko Aoki is a young woman who was born with an unusual ability--she can start fires simply by projecting energy. Luckily, her parents were very understanding and taught her various methods of controlling herself so that she could discharge the builtup energy without harming anyone. As she ages though, she is incensed by crimes committed by a gang of teenage males who abduct high school girls, torture them and then run them down with their cars. She becomes a vigilante and vows to take revenge on these young men. Their unusual deaths, burned to a crisp and suffering broken necks, catch the interest of the police and a secret group called The Guardians. I really enjoyed the way everything came together at the end of the story. Great mystery, good character development and I didn't figure out everything that was going on until close to the end!

    (read full review)
  4. 5 months ago | Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? Yes (0) | No (0)
  5. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die Shelf
    The Body Artist

    Kyle Mahoney said: 2 stars

    This strange ghost story/grieving performance piece still hasn't settled with me. In that respect, it's quite successful. In others, not so much. (I'd love to see a stage version, though.)

    Tanith said: 2 stars

    My least favourite...

    Kyle Mahoney said: 2 stars

    This strange ghost story/grieving performance piece still hasn't settled with me. In that respect, it's quite successful. In others, not so much. (I'd love to see a stage version, though.)

    Tanith said: 2 stars

    My least favourite Delillo, and I generally enjoy his work. I don't know why this was published let alone included on the 1001 list. I could be missing the point but I think it's just rubbish. Strange and pointless story about a performance artist grieving about the loss of her husband - possible ghost story element, meant to examine grief and reality but is not effective. Glad it was very short though.

    I don't think it should be in the list and don't understand its inclusion.

    (read full review)
  6. 5 months ago | Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? Yes (0) | No (0)
  7. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die Shelf
    Hard Times

    Jason Reynolds said: 5 stars

    Great book, Very Dickens. There are some really evil characters, some really good characters and most (as in life) are somewhere in between. A moral lesson that teaches us a life without love and laughter is a miserable life indeed.

    Kristel...

    Jason Reynolds said: 5 stars

    Great book, Very Dickens. There are some really evil characters, some really good characters and most (as in life) are somewhere in between. A moral lesson that teaches us a life without love and laughter is a miserable life indeed.

    Kristel said: 4 stars

    Hard Times is Charles Dickens shortest work at 277 pages and is unlike his other novels because it is set in a fictional city called Coketown, an industrial city with its pollution and social disparities. The book features trade unions and the divide between capitalism and labor. The book is structured as three parts, Sowing, Reaping and Garnering based on the Bible verse, “as a man sows, so shall he reap” and on The Book Of Ruth who garners what is left in the field after the reaping is done. The characters are Professor Gradgrind who worships “facts” and raises his daughter and son only on facts and no love or pleasure. He places his son Tom in service with Mr. Bounderby, a braggart and liar. He also marries his daughter to this older man. Mr Gradgrind takes in a child of the circus, Sissy Jupe to try to educate her after her father leaves without notice. And finally Stephen Blackpool, a noble man, shunned by his own class, poorly treated by Bounderby and finally accused of a crime he didn’t commit. The book is an indictment of utilitarian philosophy. This is a fast read for a Dickens book. I enjoyed the story and the characters were fun.

    (read full review)
  8. 5 months ago | Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? Yes (0) | No (0)
  9. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die Shelf
    The People of Hemsö

    Paula_S said: 3 stars

    This Swedish classic was an nice read, but didn't surpass my expectations. An ambitious farm hand, Carlsson, comes to the island of Hemsö to run the farm for the family owning the island; the men in the family are principally interested in fishing and hunting...

    Paula_S said: 3 stars

    This Swedish classic was an nice read, but didn't surpass my expectations. An ambitious farm hand, Carlsson, comes to the island of Hemsö to run the farm for the family owning the island; the men in the family are principally interested in fishing and hunting and the farm has been neglected. The book explores the conflict between sea people and land people and also follows the day-to-day work on the island. It is mostly interesting because of the view into the island comunity during the last 19th century.

    (read full review)
  10. 5 months ago | Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? Yes (0) | No (0)
  11. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die Shelf
    Thank You, Jeeves

    Kristel said: 4 Stars

    This book is hilarious. Bertram Wooster or Bertie loses the services of his valet, Jeeves because of his inferno Banjolele playing. It is driving everyone crazy and he is evicted. Bertie moves to the country where he can play the Banjolele. In the country,...

    Kristel said: 4 Stars

    This book is hilarious. Bertram Wooster or Bertie loses the services of his valet, Jeeves because of his inferno Banjolele playing. It is driving everyone crazy and he is evicted. Bertie moves to the country where he can play the Banjolele. In the country, Bertie meets up with a bunch of former acquaintances and several misadventures.

    Book Worm said: 4 stars

    I found this a very entertaining and fast read I really enjoyed all the humour in the story.

    Essentially this is the story of bumbling aristocrat Bertram Wooster and his highly intelligent "man" Jeeves

    While Bertie blunders his way around trying to improve his life and that of his friends it is down to the unshakeable Jeeves to put into order all the chaos Bertie manages to stir up.

    This is a first person narrative told entirely from the point of view of Bertie and as such we the reader are cast in the role of confidant, Bertie uses his own short hand when speaking which we are expected to understand within the context of the sentence, personally I find this endearing.

    The 1001 books says this has no plot, no character developement and no jokes. While I agree with the first 2 statements I have to say the whole way the story is written is very humourous or at least it appealed to me and did have me smirking at several points I particulary like;

    "The attitude of fellows towards finding girls in their bedroom shortly after midnight varies. Some like it. Some don't. I didn't"

    The reason for the its inclusion on the 1001 list according to the book is for the sublime writing style, I really enjoyed the writing it was more like a conversation with an eccentric friend than a novel.

    For anyone who has ever watched Jeeves and Wooster with Hugh Laurie and Stephen Fry this reads exactly like the show and I could not get the characters out of my head, not a bad thing as it goes.

    Paula_S said: 4 stars

    This comedy classic didn't have me laughing out loud, but I did very much enjoy poor Bertie Wooster's misadventures and Jeeves' ingeniuity in getting him out of his problems. I read quite a lot of Wodehouse books when I was a teenager (but never this) and I think this book will be even better when I eventually come back and rereads it. I think familiarity with the plot and expectiations of what happens next will make the enjoyment even greater.

    (read full review)
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  13. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die Shelf
    The Devil's Pool

    Shelley S said: 2 stars

    A simple French folk tale about a mysterious pool in a wood with a love story mixed in.


  14. 5 months ago | Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? Yes (0) | No (0)
  15. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die Shelf
    Leaden Wings

    Shelley S said: 3 stars

    Life in a big factory filled with workers just trying to make a living and preyed on by individuals who follow the Party line. If this is the best of Chinese literature, I'd hate to see the worst. Oh, wait a minute, that honour would go to Half of Man is Woman.


  16. 5 months ago | Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? Yes (0) | No (0)
  17. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die Shelf
    Rituals

    Shelley S said: 2 stars

    A strange man in Holland meets another strange man, befriends him, reads about his death, meets the deceased's estranged son, attends a tea ceremony given by the son who then kills himself. Very strange book but thankfully not long.


  18. 5 months ago | Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? Yes (0) | No (0)
  19. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die Shelf
    To Have and Have Not

    Matt S said: 1 star

    This book felt like something was almost developed but then it just became uncoordinated in its narrative to the point of silliness. The characters are boring and their introductions are arranged in unrealistically convenient manners, and as the book progresses...

    Matt S said: 1 star

    This book felt like something was almost developed but then it just became uncoordinated in its narrative to the point of silliness. The characters are boring and their introductions are arranged in unrealistically convenient manners, and as the book progresses it goes off on so many tangential concepts of a disembodied narrator or the thoughts of some erroneous character until it's difficult to see how the beginning could reach such a pointless conclusion. Read with caution and patience.

    Book Worm said: 3 stars

    This is a shortish story about a fisherman Harry Morgan, Harry lives in Key West Florida during the Great Depression. Struggling to prevent his family starving Harry is taken in by a conman who ends up costing him hundreds of dollars when he does a runner without paying Harry.

    Facing ruin Harry is forced into a life of illegal activity a life from which escape seems impossible.

    Hemingways written detail is sparse and to my mind while I could follow that facing ruin leads Harry straight into act A I found it hard to believe that it also lead straight into act B as well, for me act B would take a lot of consideration for the seemingly law abiding family man Harry rather than the way he appeared to jump straight into it.

    For me there is more going on off the page than there is on the page which leaves the reader reasoning their own way through Harrys actions and decisions.

    There is also a social comment about life at the time as seen through several minor characters, smuggling between Cuba and Florida, drunkeness, despair, prostitution, unfaithfulness and violence are products of the depression and occur when people cannot earn enough to support themselves at the most basic level.

    While the starkness of life for the characters reminded me of Steinbecks writings I just didnt find the enjoyment in this that I do with Steinbeck I couldnt connect with them the way I connect with Steinbecks characters both good and bad.

    For me this was an interesting but unemotional read

    (read full review)
  20. 5 months ago | Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? Yes (1) | No (0)
  21. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die Shelf
    The Old Devils

    Shelley S said: 2 stars

    Wretched book consisting of long boring discussions amongst middle aged drunken Englishmen and women of the upper middle class. It is of no surprise to me that it won the Booker Prize.


  22. 5 months ago | Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? Yes (0) | No (0)
  23. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die Shelf
    Threepenny Novel

    Shelley S said: 3 stars

    A disturbing novel based on the business dealings of Peachum and Macneath, unscrupulous businessmen from Victorian London. Peachum runs a business outfitting individuals who rent clothing, props, and locations for begging. Macneath rents out bargain...

    Shelley S said: 3 stars

    A disturbing novel based on the business dealings of Peachum and Macneath, unscrupulous businessmen from Victorian London. Peachum runs a business outfitting individuals who rent clothing, props, and locations for begging. Macneath rents out bargain basement stores to would be entrepreneurs who he then supplies with stolen goods from other cities. Peachum is satisfied with his lot but Macneath yearns for bigger things and eventually branches into buying dilapidated ships to sell to the British government to move troops to South Africa for the Boer War. Peachum is brought into the business but both run into financial trouble when a competitor arrives. Macneath, through nefarious means, gains control of the competitor’s bank and manages to wiggle both himself and Peachum, his father-in-law, free of disaster, but cannot help the small entrepreneurs out of the financial tsunami that overwhelms them. The cutthroat world of big business at the expense of the small shop owner is laid bare for all to see. The use of the Biblical parable of the three servants left to look after their master’s investment is used to chilling effect by a religious figure to rationalize the lack of sympathy to failed shop keepers. Christ would cry at this perverse use of His parable. It deserves four stars but was too long.

    (read full review)
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  25. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die Shelf
    News From Nowhere

    Shelley S said: 3 stars

    A utopia dreamed up by a Victorian Socialist/Communist wherein all are freed from the tyranny of law, religion, and government, where money has vanished, people live where they want, go where they want, work at whatever they wish, visit shops to choose...

    Shelley S said: 3 stars

    A utopia dreamed up by a Victorian Socialist/Communist wherein all are freed from the tyranny of law, religion, and government, where money has vanished, people live where they want, go where they want, work at whatever they wish, visit shops to choose whatever they want to wear, ride, or eat. The philosophy is "do what you will so long as none are harmed", an Anarchist's dream world. Morris would deny the Anarchist relationship but to all intents and purposes, he was a closet Anarchist.

    (read full review)
  26. 5 months ago | Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? Yes (0) | No (0)
  27. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die Shelf
    A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

    Sara W said: 5 stars + favorite

    Though difficult to read it was a well written and intriguing coming of age story.

    Augusta N said: 4 stars

    This is a semi-autobiographical novel about Stephen Dedalus' childhood in Ireland as he grapples with maturity,...

    Sara W said: 5 stars + favorite

    Though difficult to read it was a well written and intriguing coming of age story.

    Augusta N said: 4 stars

    This is a semi-autobiographical novel about Stephen Dedalus' childhood in Ireland as he grapples with maturity, religion, Irish Catholic conventions and also coming to terms with himself, especially as an artist.

    The novel shows examples of Joyce's modernist techniques that are developed more in his later works, such as Ulysees. It is told in free, indirect speech and does not have a clear narrative structure, as it will often jump from point to point (much as human thought does). When Joyce began the essay 'A Portrait of the Arist' he argued that events in the past, when they happened where not experienced as past but as present and that a narrative should recapture this. This enables Stephen's budding maturity to be shown in the prose style.

    Joyce is not an easy read but he was an artistic genius and incredibly influential towards modern literature and also the study of English Literature that we have today. Joyce uses many techniques that I have appreciated in other writers, and he is really a master of such techniques, including: stream of consciousness, interior monolgue and focusing on a character's mental reality rather than their physical reality. I feel like there was so much I missed in just one reading and there would always be more to take from this with another reading.

    (read full review)
  28. 5 months ago | Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? Yes (0) | No (0)
  29. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die Shelf
    Eva Trout

    Karen P said: 3 stars

    Eva is a strange central character who just lurches through life with no real regard for others. She's not particularly likeable but I did feel some sympathy for her. From an early age Eva is left in the care of nannies and governesses. Her mother dies when...

    Karen P said: 3 stars

    Eva is a strange central character who just lurches through life with no real regard for others. She's not particularly likeable but I did feel some sympathy for her. From an early age Eva is left in the care of nannies and governesses. Her mother dies when she is young and her father, who eventually kills himself, has very little to do with her. This distance is then repeated in her relationship with Jeremy. The ending was a little abrupt and I would have liked to know what happened afterwards.

    Book Worm said: 3 stars

    This is a story about a woman called Eva Trout (surprise!!) who inherits a huge amount of money but learns that it cant buy you love or acceptance.

    Eva is a walking disaster for those around her, she goes from being an intense child who clings to anyone who shows her affection (she is an orphan) to being a woman who uses money to buy her whatever she wants no matter the consequence.

    The people around her are drawn by her magnetism but at the same time repulsed by her demanding nature, she never settles and never learns to build herself a home which has tragic consequences.

    The story was slow to get going and once it picked up pace I found the quirky use of language for me detracted from the story, it was also not a cohesive story you are never quite sure what is real or imagined and alot of the action is implied rather than stated which can lead to false conclusions.

    (read full review)
  30. 5 months ago | Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? Yes (0) | No (0)
  31. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die Shelf
    Nemesis

    Joana M said: 5 stars

    The story takes place in Newark, in 1944 when a swift and deadly spread of polio changes the lives of its population! It's one more excellent insight on the human condition, especially on chance, guilt and the choices we make every day.

    Aga M....

    Joana M said: 5 stars

    The story takes place in Newark, in 1944 when a swift and deadly spread of polio changes the lives of its population! It's one more excellent insight on the human condition, especially on chance, guilt and the choices we make every day.

    Aga M. said: 5 stars

    Roth told one of the journalists that "Nemesis” would be his last novel, if so I can only tell – the last but one of my favourite.

    The epidemic of polio among the children of Newark in 1944 is the canvas to ask the most important questions about decisions, responsibility, retribution, fate, the right to personal happiness, guilt.

    How would you feel if for many, many years you would think you’re responsible for bringing pain and death to innocent children?

    (read full review)
  32. 5 months ago | Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? Yes (0) | No (0)
  33. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die Shelf
    The 13 Clocks

    Milena O said: 5 stars. This is actually one of my favorite books - I received it as a birthday preset probably 15 years ago and I read it quite often. I love the language and the imagery in this story. The descriptions of the Todal are one of my favorite things in literature. It was a...

    Milena O said: 5 stars. This is actually one of my favorite books - I received it as a birthday preset probably 15 years ago and I read it quite often. I love the language and the imagery in this story. The descriptions of the Todal are one of my favorite things in literature. It was a wonderful fairy tale filled with alliteration, word play, and imaginative characters.

    Kristel said: 3 stars
    A delightful little fairy tale, word play book. I think the author was procrastinating writing more seriously and got lost in playing with words.

    Lottie Jane said: 4 stars

    I actually interrupted another 1001 Books I was reading to read this one. Let me say that it took me about an hour to finish this.

    When I asked for it from my library, I thought it was a mystery story. The title 13 Clocks sounded like a good title for a detective story. Imagine my surprise when I got it and discovered that it had illustrations in it. That peaked my interest so I perused it a little and was surprised by the big type and the description on the jacket cover. "How can anyone describe this book? It isn't a parable, a fairy story or a poem, but rather a mixture of all three. It is beautiful and it is comic. It is philosophical and it is cheery." That description caused me to read it immediately.

    The story is simple and very much like a fairy tale. What makes it remarkable is the language that Thurber uses. He is poetic, he is humorous, and he is inventive throughout the short tale. Although I was reading the story, I was really enjoying the language of the tale. His sentences were perfectly written as he weaved his plot.

    Surprisingly, this story is marked as children's literature. I think a child might find the vocabulary in it to be difficult. I was interested in why this book made the 1001 List and looked it up. My book says "the language is dazzingly inventive and the tone wickedly ironic -- hallmarks of the most admired and controversial humorist of the first half of the twentieth century". I guess I can agree with the list on the language.

    Anyway, I recommend it because it is something different and really a breath of fresh air. Simple plot but beautifully written.

    yvonnep23 said: 4 stars

    This was a weird and wonderful, imaginative fairy tale, told with poetic word play, alliteration and rhyme. The whole tale is full of coincedences and other classic fairy tale story devices. It is the tale of a prince, overcoming obstacles to make sure that good triumphs over evil.

    It should be on the 1001 list for Thurber's use of language alone.

    Aga M. said: 5 stars

    I cannot precisely explain why I love this short story. This is just a fairytale – the good is rewarded, the evil is defeated, the prince can marry his beloved princess. But in Thurber’s story there is something special. Maybe the language. Maybe the characters. Maybe the wit. I do not know, but my inner child is happy after reading it : )))

    And thank you Dusty for turning my attention to this book.

    (read full review)
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  35. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die Shelf
    The Gathering

    Riddley said: 4 Stars
    What a wonderfully rich and evocative title this is. The Gathering. With slightly ominous tones. The gathering of the clans, the gathering darkness, the gathering of material, an abscess, the gathering of yarn to spin a tale.
    It is a tale of the psycho-sexual...

    Riddley said: 4 Stars
    What a wonderfully rich and evocative title this is. The Gathering. With slightly ominous tones. The gathering of the clans, the gathering darkness, the gathering of material, an abscess, the gathering of yarn to spin a tale.
    It is a tale of the psycho-sexual forest that all tales must cross. Here are Hansel and Gretel gathering the crumbs as they try to find their way into the past, before the wrinkled hands of time baked them. But Hansel has drowned. How can you follow footsteps across the water?
    Here is Red Riding Hood retracing her steps to before she ran with the wolves, trying to put together a basket of wishes for her grandmother, castaway in the mists of time. Shapeshifting from kindly old lady to wolf and back again.
    Family is a conspiracy against time. When the clan is gathered the past is as vivid and present as the here and now. You have to struggle for your own space.
    "The Hegarty nose," says Kitty. "Ita's had a job done on our nose."
    "I really think," says Mossie
    "What?"
    "I really think. It's her nose. At this stage."
    The fabulous and the particular are intermingled in this tale of one woman's life and the voice in her head trying to make sense of it. But is there sense to be made of it?
    "I am gripped by the thought that I have, shamefully, forgotten something: there is a tampon seeping into the water of the downstairs toilet; I have left half a biscuit on the arm of a chair, or forgotten to finish my tea. I can feel it going cold in my mouth, as I hunt around and finally find the empty cup."
    A funeral, a family, a mystery, madness, abuse... this has all the elements of a blockbuster but it remains personal and slightly mysterious. There are details pinned so perfectly to the page that they give the voice a truth that only fiction can achieve.

    Zombie Kitten said: 4 stars

    Predictable, but it was the writing, not the story, that kept me hooked.

    Amanda L said: 3 stars

    After the death of one of their siblings, Liam, the remaining members of the large Hegarty family gather at their mother's house in Ireland for his wake and funeral. The novel is narrated by Liam's sister, Veronica, who was closest to him. Most of the book consists of Veronica trying to make sense of her family's past in order to solve her own identity crisis; however, since she can only speculate about much of her family's history, neither the reader nor Veronica can really know what is true and what is imagined.

    There wasn't a lot of action here as most of the novel revolved around the inner workings of Veronica's mind. I didn't really like most of the book, but somewhere in the last hundred pages or so, I finally understood what had happened to Veronica and Liam (and possibly other members of the family) that they had both repressed for so long and that raised so many questions in their lives. There's really a lot lurking between the lines in this story, but I just wasn't interested enough until the end to bother searching that deeply for it. It was just a case of too little, too late for me.

    (read full review)
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  37. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die Shelf
    The Singapore Grip

    Vicky W said: 3 stars

    Very interesting view of World War II.

    yvonnep23 said: 3 stars

    Set in Singapore at the outbreak of World War II, this story follows a group of well-off Western characters who become entangled in each others lives. Farrell explores how...

    Vicky W said: 3 stars

    Very interesting view of World War II.

    yvonnep23 said: 3 stars

    Set in Singapore at the outbreak of World War II, this story follows a group of well-off Western characters who become entangled in each others lives. Farrell explores how the characters are affected by the war, and how they change as the war is changing Singapore. Walter is one of the prominent business men of the area who deals mostly in rubber and Joan and Monty are his rather callous and spoilt children. Kate, his other daughter, is still a child and seems to be unspoilt by society and the ways of the world. Matthew Webb finds himself inheriting his father's business after his death at the start of the book. I think that Webb's death is made to symbolise the end of an era and the start of a new one. The characters are the best thing about this novel. Ehrendorf, an American soldier and lover of Joan, Vera, a "Eurasian" who claims to be born of Russian aristocracy and a rich Chinese tea merchant, the Major, a well-meaning man who's good intentions are constantly thwarted and Dupigny, a down on his luck, cynical Frenchman; these are all characters which added to my enjoyment of the story. There is a lot of history in this novel as it goes into detail about the rise of European businesss in the East and the Japanese invasion of Singapore. I found this interesting but sometimes hard to follow. The book is almost 700 pages and the chapters are very long. I think it is one that deserves to be savoured a little bit at a time. The novel of the title comes from a question that Matthew spends a lot of time throughout the novel trying to find out - "What is the Singapore grip?" The end of the novel offers two answers to this question, one crude and probably accurate and the other an idealistic conclusion that Matthew comes to by himself.

    I think this book deserves it's place on the 1001 list as it draws very well on historical events to create a vivid depiction of the events of World War II and European business in the East.

    (read full review)
  38. 5 months ago | Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? Yes (0) | No (0)
  39. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die Shelf
    Felicia's Journey

    Kristen N said: 1 star

    Incredibly, incredibly sad and depressing....I would have to watch the movie Babe like, 100 times just to lift my mood after reading this.

    yvonnep23 said: 4 stars

    This is a cleverly written story about a young Irish girl who becomes...

    Kristen N said: 1 star

    Incredibly, incredibly sad and depressing....I would have to watch the movie Babe like, 100 times just to lift my mood after reading this.

    yvonnep23 said: 4 stars

    This is a cleverly written story about a young Irish girl who becomes pregnant by a man who has moved away from his home town. The story starts as she sets off to find him. I thought the story would be one of hardship and love, with Felicia fighting her way through troubles to find the man she loves. Trevor, however, seems to do this on purpose so that he can gradually build up the feeling of menace throughout the story until it reaches a startling finale. Trevor discloses his facts slowly and there are a lot of places in the story where the reader has to guess or make assumptions which are shattered later. It is a fast paced story and one which I found very hard to put down once I had picked it up.

    I think that this one does deserve to be on the 1001 list as Trevor is a masterful story teller with a good command of techniques to keep the reader guessing until the very last pages.

    (read full review)
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