3sg jef fery

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

joi, 17 martie 2011

Book Talk: *The Weird Sisters,* by Eleanor Brown

Posted on 05:00 by Guy

The Weird Sisters
Eleanor Brown
Amy Einhorn Books/Putnam (2011), hardcover (ISBN 0399157220 / 9780399157226)
Fiction, 336 pages
Source: purchased e-book (Kindle) (ASIN B00475AXHY)
Reason for reading: personal

Opening Lines: “We came home because we were failures. We wouldn’t admit that, of course, not at first, not to ourselves, and certainly not to anyone else. We said we came home because our mother was ill, because we needed a break, a momentary pause before setting out for the Next Big Thing. But the truth was, we had failed, and rather than let anyone know, we crafted careful excuses and alibis, and wrapped them around ourselves like a cloak to keep out the cold hard truth.”
Book description: The Andreas family is one of readers. Their father, a renowned Shakespeare professor who speaks almost entirely in verse, has named his three daughters after famous Shakespearean women. When the sisters return to their childhood home, ostensibly to care for their ailing mother, but really to lick their wounds and bury their secrets, they are horrified to find the others there. See, we love each other. We just don't happen to like each other very much. But the sisters soon discover that everything they've been running from-one another, their small hometown, and themselves-might offer more than they ever expected.
Comments: Do you recall, almost two months ago, when I asked this question:
"Do you ever read multiple reviews of A Book Everyone Loves just hoping to find ONE that says 'meh'?"
It was inspired by this book. Since asking it, I have seen a couple of less-than-enthused responses to it, but for the most part, it continues to be A Book Everyone Loves.

Having spent a good chunk of my adult life as an appendage to academia (grad-student spouse in a college town, then wife of a faculty member at a small college in a mid-sized city), I still tend to be drawn to fiction set in that world. The three Andreas sisters grew up as daughters of a Shakespeare scholar at a small midwestern college, and were shaped by both those factors. Each was named for a character in a Shakespeare play, and essentially speaks Shakespeare as a second language - it’s the method by which their father is most comfortable communicating; and each attended Barnwell College. But then their paths diverged. Rose, the eldest, became a math professor at a nearby university, a woman of numbers rather than words; her younger sisters, Bianca (Bean) and Cordelia, were more ambitious to get out of Barnwell than anything else.

However, when their mother is diagnosed with breast cancer, each of the sisters already has another reason of her own to come home to help care for her, and to rediscover the town that still has a hold on them all.

Debut novelist Eleanor Brown chooses to narrate The Weird Sisters (a Macbeth reference - also a band of magical musicians mentioned in the Harry Potter books) in the unusual first-person plural, giving the sisters a collective voice even as she relates the individual threads of their story. I always find that interesting, and I really liked the way she used it here, particularly when she employed it to make wry comments about one sister’s behavior or thoughts as if they were observed by the others. Given the fact that the sisters really do have issues with one another - as in many families, they wouldn’t choose to associate with each other if they weren’t related to each other - I thought that it provided an interesting counterpoint to have them speak as one.

I thought the novel’s strengths were in the writing and in Brown’s portrayal of the mix of friction and fondness in the sisters’ relationships with each other. The liberal use of quotes from Shakespeare throughout the narrative and characters’ conversations adds a highbrow element, but not an off-putting one - given the novel’s framework, it fits. I didn’t find the sisters themselves quite so compelling, though; I appreciate that Brown didn’t try too hard to make them endearing, but sometimes it felt like she went too far in the opposite direction from that, which I think really works best in satire - and this novel is much more earnest than satirical. The story itself covers pretty familiar ground; Brown’s approach to it is unique, but I didn’t feel she was really saying anything new.

I liked The Weird Sisters, especially as a first novel, and I’ll be interested in seeing the progress of Eleanor Brown’s writing career. However, I honestly wanted to be part of the Everyone Who Loves This Book when I finished it...and I can’t honestly say I am. I may like it more in retrospect, or even grow to love it, but now, I just Liked This Book.

Rating: 3.5/5

Other reviews via the Book Blogs Search Engine

Shop Indie Bookstores

Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links (IndieBound.org)
Trimiteți prin e-mail Postați pe blog!Trimiteți pe XDistribuiți pe Facebook
Posted in fiction, one book at a time, reading, reviews | No comments
Postare mai nouă Postare mai veche Pagina de pornire

0 comentarii:

Trimiteți un comentariu

Abonați-vă la: Postare comentarii (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Book Talk: *The Lonely Polygamist*, by Brady Udall
    The Lonely Polygamist: A Novel Brady Udall W. W. Norton & Company (2010), Hardcover (ISBN 0393062627 / 9780393062625) Fiction, 608 pages...
  • Sunday Salon: The end (of the year) is coming!
    I finished and reviewed my 50th and 51st books of 2010 last week, although the reviews have yet to post here ( LibraryThing is all caught up...
  • BBAW 2010: Forgotten Treasures - Books Remembered and Recommended
      BBAW 2010:  A Treasure Chest of Infinite Books and Infinite Blogs Thursday—Forgotten Treasure Sure we’ve all read about Freedom and Mock...
  • BlogHer'10: What's the "publishing ecosystem" evolving into?
    I'll warn you now - my BlogHer'10 experiences will, once again, be the subject of several posts. There are a couple of sessions I...
  • Book Talk: *Mockingjay*, by Suzanne Collins (w/a few spoilers)
      Mockingjay (The Final Book of The Hunger Games ) Suzanne Collins Scholastic Press (2010), Hardcover (0439023513 / 9780439023511) Fiction (...
  • Book Talk: *Red Hook Road*, by Ayelet Waldman
    Red Hook Road Ayelet Waldman Doubleday (2010), Hardcover (ISBN 0385517866 / 9780385517867) Fiction, 352 pages Source : ARC (Advance Reader...
  • Sunday Salon: Writers, readers, and NaNoWriMo
      For the second year in a row, I'm publicly saying NO to National Novel Writing Month ( NaNoWriMo ) . I love to read, and I love to wr...
  • BBAW: New Treasures - Book Blog Discoveries
    BBAW has an overall theme this year: "A Treasure Chest of Infinite Books and Infinite Blogs." Monday—First Treasure We invite you...
  • Sunday Salon: Season of the Lists
    Year-end is fast approaching, like it or not, and one sign of that is the arrival of the Lists. Because I’m once again nursing a disloca...
  • Sunday Salon: Thankful for blog-driven reading, and Indie Lit Awards!
      Karen ’s comment on my entry for last week’s Weekend Assignment made me stop and think for a minute: “It's interesting that your hab...

Categories

  • 'riting
  • #DailyBookPic
  • 24-Hour Readathon
  • a bunch of books
  • announcements
  • Armchair BEA
  • Audiobook Challenge
  • audiobooks
  • BBAW
  • BEA11
  • BEA12
  • blog tour
  • Blogging Authors Reading Challenge
  • BlogHer
  • BlogHer Book Club
  • blogs elsewhere
  • book bloggers
  • BookBloggerCon
  • CBSLA Best of LA
  • Comic Con 2011
  • ComicCon 2010
  • contests and giveaways
  • Ebook Reading Challenge
  • Faith 'n' Fiction 2011
  • family
  • Favorites List
  • fiction
  • FnFRT
  • food
  • fotos
  • Friday Foto
  • Friday/Monday Foto
  • guest post
  • holidays
  • Indie Lit Awards
  • LA Moms Blog
  • links
  • memes and blogger games
  • Memorable Memoirs Reading Challenge
  • metabloggery
  • MomsLA
  • Monday Moment
  • mostly true stories
  • NaBloPoMo
  • nerd factor
  • news traffic and weather
  • nonfiction
  • one book at a time
  • pop culture: movies
  • pop culture: music
  • pop culture: TV
  • randomness
  • reading
  • retrospective
  • reviews
  • roundup
  • RYOB Challenge
  • ShelfAwareness
  • SheWrites
  • site stuff
  • So Cal
  • Sunday Salon
  • THE HANDMAID'S TALE Read-Along
  • THE SPARROW Read-Along
  • TheSmartlyLA
  • thinking out loud
  • Thoughts From My Reading
  • travel
  • Tuesday Tangents
  • Vacation 2010
  • Weekend Assignment
  • Weekend Review
  • Weekly Geeks
  • work

Blog Archive

  • ►  2012 (18)
    • ►  ianuarie (18)
  • ▼  2011 (239)
    • ►  decembrie (14)
    • ►  noiembrie (19)
    • ►  octombrie (12)
    • ►  septembrie (18)
    • ►  august (22)
    • ►  iulie (16)
    • ►  iunie (20)
    • ►  mai (21)
    • ►  aprilie (22)
    • ▼  martie (24)
      • Tuesday Tangents: Hey, my birthday really IS today!
      • Monday Moment: Recycle(d) Crayons?
      • Sunday Salon: The Sales Pitch
      • Friday Filler - the Better-Than-Nothing edition
      • Book Talk: *Skipping a Beat*, by Sarah Pekkanen
      • Inquiring minds wanted to know! (A's for your Q's)
      • Weekly Geeks' 10 Things, plus Top 10 Book-Blogging...
      • Work-wise, blogging may not always work out
      • Sunday Salon: I've Got the News!
      • Week-End Review: Friendly Words and Four-part Linkage
      • Book Talk: *The Weird Sisters,* by Eleanor Brown
      • I am four years old today - and it's Day 2 of my B...
      • Tuesday Tangents, BLOGIVERSARY Edition: Help Me Ce...
      • Monday Miscellany: Where did Sunday go?
      • Week-End Review: Friday Fives & a Funny Foto...
      • Growing Pains; or, does a blogging community get s...
      • Book Talk: *This is Where I Leave You*, by Jonatha...
      • Women's History Month: Repeating and re-enacting b...
      • Monday Moment: Celebration!
      • Sunday Salon: E-Book Week, and What Publishers Want
      • Week-end Review: The Friday Fives
      • Dear Amazon: You can't fire me. I quit.
      • Booking it, in thirty minutes or less
      • Book Talk: *Mary Ann in Autumn,* by Armistead Maupin
    • ►  februarie (26)
    • ►  ianuarie (25)
  • ►  2010 (243)
    • ►  decembrie (21)
    • ►  noiembrie (33)
    • ►  octombrie (29)
    • ►  septembrie (25)
    • ►  august (24)
    • ►  iulie (23)
    • ►  iunie (26)
    • ►  mai (22)
    • ►  aprilie (28)
    • ►  martie (12)
Un produs Blogger.

Despre mine

Guy
Vizualizați profilul meu complet