I recently finished Emma Donoghue’s “The Wonder” and can’t really recommend it. It’s set in the mid 1800s and focuses on a Nightingale and Irish nurse/nun overseeing a two week 24/7 watch over an 11 year old girl that claims to have gone four months without food. Nothing of interest happens other than mundane details of the watch until the last 40 or so pages and by that time, I was just trudging along to finish. I was looking forward to reading “Room”
by the same author but this one has given me a pause.
LOVED Elin Hilderbrand’s “Summer of ‘69” that is a family drama set in, you guessed it...1969! The moon landing and Teddy Kennedy’s famous accident are minor subplots as the story focuses on an upper middle class mother sending her only son off to war and her three daughters at various crossroads in their lives. I love most of Elin’s books but I’d say this one is in my upper tier of her catalogue.
I’m close to a third of the way through Liane Moriarty’s “Truly, Madly Guilty” and while I typically enjoy her books, this one feels like work so far.
by the same author but this one has given me a pause.
LOVED Elin Hilderbrand’s “Summer of ‘69” that is a family drama set in, you guessed it...1969! The moon landing and Teddy Kennedy’s famous accident are minor subplots as the story focuses on an upper middle class mother sending her only son off to war and her three daughters at various crossroads in their lives. I love most of Elin’s books but I’d say this one is in my upper tier of her catalogue.
I’m close to a third of the way through Liane Moriarty’s “Truly, Madly Guilty” and while I typically enjoy her books, this one feels like work so far.
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. Excellent writing, gorgeous prose and also paints vivid pictures of a place I know nothing about (Sofia, Bulgaria) and more importantly, expresses emotion in ways that are both beautiful and heartbreaking. It's heavy though - at times very brutal in more ways than one, but definitely worth it.
I actually engaged my husband in trying it out, and we couldn't make it work based on the description of the scene and the apparent sizes of the characters.
and
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The lack of punctuation/poetic style annoys me (If I want poetry, I'll read poetry) and seems pretentious, at least at this point.
Someone mentioned that it was really an anthology, and if I'd not been put off by the writing style, I think I might not have continued because I like a story with central characters and character development.
Interested to hear if others have read her and recommend other titles.
It's a good time.