by Susan Fletcher ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 1, 2004
Much to enjoy in this rural browse, though the land has been grazed before.
Fletcher debuts with the tale of a girl’s coming of age in Wales: as plentiful elements of richness and grace slowly give way to fairly standardized small-town gothic.
Evangeline Jones is only seven and living in Birmingham, England, when her pretty young mother dies suddenly, leaving the fatherless Evie orphaned. So it’s off to Wales with this alert and spunky little girl: she’s sent to the village of Cae Tresaint, or, more accurately, to the nearby farm of her maternal grandparents, where—from a viewpoint 21 years later, and expecting her first child—she will re-create for us the remarkable events of her first year on the farm, when she was eight. There will be the life of the farm itself—cattle, sheep, illness, changing weather, veterinary emergencies—to carry the story forward with much of genuine interest, but it’s the mystery of her own parentage—and of her own sexuality—that constitutes Evie’s deeper story. Bit by bit, she will piece together the mystery of her own father—who he was, where he came from, why he disappeared—and in so doing, will gradually learn more and more also about her mother, whose own childhood, and first love, also took place on this very farm. Traces of her absent mother are everywhere: she’s remembered by her own parents, of course, but remembered most fondly by the hired hand, Daniel (16 years older than Evie), by the strange but kind recluse, Billie Macklin, and even, though with ferocity rather than fondness, by the mean and crotchety shopkeeper, Mr. Phipps. Added to Evie’s absent parents is yet another absence—after, that is, the disappearance and presumed abduction of the pretty and flirtatious Rosie Hughes, an element in the plot serves only as adornment, not necessity, and that consequently does its large share in bringing on the element of melodrama as Evie faces trial both by fear and by fire.
Much to enjoy in this rural browse, though the land has been grazed before.Pub Date: Sept. 1, 2004
ISBN: 0-393-05988-X
Page Count: 224
Publisher: Norton
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2004
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by Isabel Allende ‧ RELEASE DATE: May 23, 1985
A strong, absorbing Chilean family chronicle, plushly upholstered—with mystical undercurrents (psychic phenomena) and a measure of leftward political commitment. (The author is a cousin of ex-Pres. Salvador Allende, an ill-fated socialist.) The Truebas are estate-owners of independent wealth, of whom only one—the eventual patriarch, Esteban—fully plays his class role. Headstrong and conservative, Esteban is a piggish youth, mistreating his peons and casually raping his girl servants . . . until he falls under the spell of young Clara DelValle: mute for nine years after witnessing the gruesome autopsy of her equally delicate sister, Clara is capable of telekinesis and soothsaying; she's a pure creature of the upper realms who has somehow dropped into crude daily life. So, with opposites attracting, the marriage of Esteban and Clara is inevitable—as is the succession of Clara-influenced children and grandchildren. Daughter Blanca ignores Class barriers to fall in love with—and bear a child by—the foreman's son, who will later become a famous leftwing troubadour (on the model of Victor Jara). Twin boys Jaime and Nicholas head off in different directions—one growing up to become a committed physician, the other a mystic/entrepreneur. And Alba, the last clairvoyant female of the lineage, will end the novel in a concentration camp of the Pinochet regime. Allende handles the theosophical elements here matter-of-factly: the paranormal powers of the Trueba women have to be taken more or less on faith. (Veteran readers of Latin American fiction have come to expect mysticism as part of the territory.) And the political sweep sometimes seems excessively insistent or obtrusive: even old Esteban recants from his reactionary ways at the end, when they seem to destroy his family. ("Thus the months went by, and it became clear to everyone, even Senator Trueba, that the military had seized power to keep it for themselves and not hand the country over to the politicians of the right who made the coup possible.") But there's a comfortable, appealing professionalism to Allende's narration, slowly turning the years through the Truebas' passions and secrets and fidelities. She doesn't rush; the characters are clear and sharp; there's style here but nothing self-conscious or pretentious. So, even if this saga isn't really much deeper than the Belva Plain variety, it's uncommonly satisfying—with sturdy, old-fashioned storytelling and a fine array of exotic, historical shadings.
Pub Date: May 23, 1985
ISBN: 0553383809
Page Count: -
Publisher: Knopf
Review Posted Online: Sept. 13, 2011
Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 1985
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by Isabel Allende ; translated by Frances Riddle
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by Isabel Allende ; translated by Frances Riddle
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by Isabel Allende ; translated by Frances Riddle
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by Fyodor Dostoevsky ; translated by Michael R. Katz ‧ RELEASE DATE: Nov. 21, 2017
It’s not quite idiomatic—for that there’s Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky’s version—but the translation moves easily...
“ ‘I don’t need any…translations,’ muttered Raskolnikov.” Well, of course he does, hence this new translation of an old standby of Russian-lit survey courses.
Driven to desperation, a morally sketchy young man kills and kills again. He gets away with it—at least for a while, until a psychologically astute cop lays a subtle trap. Throw in a woman friend who hints from the sidelines that he might just feel better confessing, and you have—well, maybe not Hercule Poirot or Kurt Wallender, but at least pretty familiar ground for an episode of a PBS series or Criminal Minds. The bare bones of that story, of course, are those of Crime and Punishment, published in 1866, when Dostoyevsky was well on the road from young democrat to middle-aged reactionary: thus the importance of confession, nursed along by the naughty lady of the night with the heart of gold, and thus Dostoyevsky’s digs at liberal-inclined intellectuals (“That’s what they’re like these writers, literary men, students, loudmouths…Damn them!”) and at those who would point to crimes great and small and say that society made them do it. So Rodion Raskolnikov, who does a nasty pawnbroker, “a small, dried-up miserable old woman, about sixty years old, with piercing, malicious little eyes, a small sharp nose, and her bare head,” in with an ax, then takes it to her sister for good measure. It’s to translator Katz’s credit that he gives the murder a satisfyingly grotty edge, with blood spurting and eyes popping and the like. Much of the book reads smoothly, though too often with that veneer of translator-ese that seems to overlie Russian texts more than any other; Katz's version sometimes seems to slip into Constance Garnett–like fustiness, as when, for instance, Raskolnikov calls Svidrigaylov "a crude villain...voluptuous debaucher and scoundrel.”
It’s not quite idiomatic—for that there’s Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky’s version—but the translation moves easily and legibly enough through Raskolnikov’s nasty deeds, game of cat and mouse, and visionary redemption.Pub Date: Nov. 21, 2017
ISBN: 978-1-63149-033-0
Page Count: 608
Publisher: Liveright/Norton
Review Posted Online: Sept. 2, 2017
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 2017
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