Showing posts with label Families.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Families.. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Landline

Landline by Rainbow Rowell
310 Pages


Landline starts with scriptwriter Georgie McCool telling her husband Neal that she won't be able to go with the family to spend Christmas with his mother because she has too crank out a new script for her dream pilot.  Their marriage, already rocky, suffers as a result and off the husband goes with Georgie's 2 daughters.  Georgie tries to keep in touch with the family but her cell phone keeps dying.  Then one night she tries to call using her mother's phone and finally gets a hold of Neal, only it is the Neal of the past, before they got married.  Through conversations with this Neal, Georgie begins to realize how much the couple has lost as the years progressed.

Rainbow Rowell's Eleanor and Park was a very popular YA book and this novel, aimed at adult audiences is proving to be popular as well.  The only thing I had a problem with in the novel was that the blamed seemed be one-sided and current day Neal seems one-dimensional. 

Thursday, July 10, 2014

A Life Apart

A Life Apart by L. Y. Marlow 443 pages


Marlow’s second novel opens at the end of the story, then quickly reverts to the beginning. The beginning is December 7, 1941. 

Since he was a kid, Morris Sullivan has loved ships. He built model ships as a child. After his high school girlfriend, sweetheart is too strong a word, gets pregnant, Morris marries Agnes and joins the Navy in 1940. He is stationed aboard the USS Oklahoma in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.  On a beautiful Sunday morning, Morris revels at how beautiful the harbor is; yet he’s also confused about his lackluster feelings for his wife and their almost-year-old baby girl, Emma. Roughly round 7 a.m., all hell breaks loose.

Morris is hit by shrapnel and is thrown into the water.  As he is about to go under for the last time, a hand pulls him to safety. Morris spends months recuperating from his injuries and when he is able, he wants to thank the man who saved him from certain death. Robert Dobbins, an African-American, however, dies of his injuries. Morris writes Robert’s family a brief note of thanks, but when he learns that the address to notify next of kin is in his hometown, Boston, he is compelled to go visit. It’s love at first sight when Morris’s blue eyes rest on Robert’s sister, Beatrice.

Beatrice, from Mississippi, is in Boston to attend the colored teacher’s college. She feels the attraction too, but knows that a relationship between a white man and a colored woman is impossible. Morris talks Beatrice into corresponding via letters.

Upon his return, Morris tries to make a life with Agnes and Emma, but he is in too deep.  He loves Emma, is fond of Agnes, and his heart belongs to Beatrice…and hers to him.  The story that follows is what happens over the next 50 years.

 Not only is A Life Apart, a historical novel, it’s also a social and psychological history of the United States from the 1940s through the 1990s. The story is also a romance, but in the same vein as romance novels.

I highly recommend this book; I give it 5 stars.
I received this book for free from Blogging for Books for this review.

Monday, May 19, 2014

Weight of Blood

Weight of Blood by Laura McHugh
306 Pages

Set in the town of Henbane, this novel tracks the progress of Lucy Dane trying to find out what happened to her friend Cheri and to her own mother who disappeared when she was a baby. The narrative is split between the past with Lila, Lucy's mother narrating, and Lucy narrating in the present.  Family secrets are revealed as the plot progresses with an explosive ending.

Laura McHugh is a Missouri author (a category that might have been a better wildcard category instead of Gaiman).  While reviewers want to compare the book with Gillian Flynn's novel, it really isn't that similar but is still an enjoyable read.