Literature Books


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Literature-->14
Related Subjects: Festivals Journals Performance Myths and Folktales Reviews and Criticism Awards and Bestsellers Online Reading Biography Cultural Reading Groups Short Stories Magazines and E-zines Electronic Text Archives Directories Periods and Movements Authors Poetry Drama Genres Children's
More Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250
Literature Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Literature
Light From The Vanished Age
Published in Digital by Amazon (2007-12-31)
Author: Myron Bischane
List price: $0.00
New price: $0.00

Average review score:

Light from the Vanished Age
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-21
It just gets better and better as it goes. The characters are very real and you can quickly get a feel for who they are. I had a very good sense of what life must have been like in a small town in the late 60's. Can wait to read more!

Very Enjoyable
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-19
It has been a very enjoyable read thus far. I look forward to seeing more from Mr. Bischane in the future.

Can't wait to read the whole book!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-14
I was captivated from the very start. The writing style is rich in descriptiveness, yet not at all tedious. I feel intimate with the characters already, and am totally drawn-in to wanting to follow them on their journey. The magnetic attraction of nostalgia notwithstanding, i find the obvious groundwork being laid in the first pages to be quite compelling. A great read, and thought provoking at the same time -- right up my alley!

Tennyson, I believe
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-13
Nice, literary title. Derived, I believe, from a poem by Tennyson. Am I right, Mr. Bischane? And as an epigraph lover and published novelist, I like the Joyce quote as well (though there is no apostrophe in Finnegans Wake). All in all, a splendid effort: nerve, verve, edginess, and entertaining asides ('What's IT all about, Reverend?'). The characters force themselves noisily, ironically, and sarcastically into life. I haven't seen Proust here yet but Kerouac and Balzac and even a bit of Henderson the Rain King come to mind. Not a bad mix for anyone at any time. Myron makes it look easy but it ain't. Five stars.

Down and Out in Pittsfield
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-12
There cannot possibly be a grimmer beginning than locking a bunch of thugs in a diner, unless it's burying your father in his own backyard, (which is probably illegal) . The stage is set, and I'm looking forward to following this extraordinary crew of kids as they move up and out. The language is vivid and the attention to detail remarkable. Clearly this book will take the reader around the world once or twice and in the company of richly drawn characeters who will have a great deal to say about their changing times.

Literature
On The Banks Of Plum Creek (Little House (Original Series Paperback))
Published in School & Library Binding by Tandem Library (2003-04-30)
Author: Laura Ingalls Wilder
List price: $14.65
New price: $14.65
Used price: $12.49

Average review score:

The Best of the Series
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-21
The Little House series are great read aloud books.

Our daughter is five and this series is perfectly age appropriate, even though an older child would enjoy them equally as well. For younger ones (three or so), there is a great picture book series called "My first little house books," or something like that. One of these is a story based of a chapter in this book and is called "Christmas in the Big Woods."

These CD's are great for long trips in the car. The narrator's voice is wonderful. The adults will find themselves enjoying listening themselves.

"One the Banks of Plum Creek" is the best of the series. It is the one where Mary and Laura go to school and where the character of Nellie Olson is introduced. Her brand of spoiled rotten meanness is nothing short of tantalizing to a five year old. Also, there are the wonderful Christmas chapters.

Just excellent, all around. I highly recommend the books to read alound and the CD's.

Fabulous!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-20
Whether you have read the Little House books or have never heard of them, this book on tape is wonderful for everyone from small children to adults. The narrator who reads it does an amazing job of capturing the childhood wonderment and emotions Laura was trying to convey. It is also so interesting to hear the way families lived back in the 1800's. I could listen to this book on tape over and over again.

On the Banks of Plum Creek
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-23

Book review
I did my report on the book called On the Banks of Plum Creek.
The author of this novel is Laura Ingalls Wilders. It is also historical fiction.
This story is about a family that is very close. There is baby Carrie the littlest, the middle child was Laura but her nick name was Little Half Pint, and the oldest is named Mary. Mary was such a little lady she always did what her mother told her to do. But Laura was the rebel in the family she was always getting dirty or getting into trouble. But Carrie is too little to have a background. Pa traded his horses and bunny for a dugout from Mr. Nelson. There was a creek close to the house and they played there often but they must never go into the deep waters with out Pa or Ma (Laura learned that lesson fast).
I loved this book because I love the time period it was set in and I have read many stories by the same author like Little House in the Big Woods. It would suit some one who loves Family stories and the time period and his farm world it is more like a fun book to read but it is Historical fiction as well.

A can't-miss addition to the series!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-07
Laura Ingalls is now eight-years-old, her sister Mary is nine, and Carrie is still just a tiny tot. While they are all still quite young, they are expected to help out with the chores around the house - from sweeping to dusting, cooking and setting the table. But this year, the girls are in a strange new place. Looking to settle in an area where a school and church are close by, and the Ingalls' have a chance to grow a wonderful crop that will provide quite a profit, the family heads to Walnut Grove, Minnesota. Traveling by covered wagon, the family, along with all of their belongings, travels all the way through Indian Territory, across Kansas, Missouri, and Iowa, stopping at their destination in Minnesota. There, they are surrounded by Norwegian's who speak very little English. However, they are good neighbors who assist them in times of trouble. Trading their horses for a home located under the ground, Laura's family begins to call Minnesota their home. And, before long, Pa has built a lovely home by the banks of Plum Creek. He believes that his wheat crop will provide enough funds to pay off their debts when the time comes. But when locusts invade in cloud-like swarms, eating everything in their sight, the family must endure hardships that were unexpected.

But things are not all bad. Having never attended school before, Laura and Mary are finally near enough a schoolhouse where they can attend daily lessons that help them develop reading, writing, and arithmetic skills. It is at this particular school where the two older Ingalls girls are exposed to children - both male and female - who are close to their age. Some of whom title Mary and Laura "country girls." But the label does not affect how the two sisters view themselves, or their family; and only gives them the courage to befriend various girls who love to spend time with them. It is at school, however, that Laura encounters the spoiled, yet oh-so-pretty, Nellie Oleson, who goes out of her way to give both Laura and Mary a hard time. But Laura isn't having any of it, and resolves to get even with the vicious Nellie, even if it upsets her Ma and Pa. Luckily, with Ms. Beadle - the schoolteacher - around, Laura and Mary have the confidence to stand up for themselves, and receive the education that their Ma always wanted them to have; while getting the socialization they deserve. But even attending school doesn't excuse them from having to assist their family when the going gets tough.

Up until last year, I had been a diehard fan of the LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE TV series, but had never had the opportunity to delve into the wonderful tales told by Laura Ingalls Wilder herself. Upon reading the introduction novel, LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE, I quickly fell in love with the Ingalls family all over again; and, since then, they have taken up residence in my heart, and kept me fascinated with the various adventures they experienced throughout their lives. Laura is such a lively, brave, fun-loving character; whose ambition, kindness, and, oft-times, naughtiness, make her appealing from start to finish. Her relationship with her family is hard to resist, as she manages to please and displease them on a daily basis, all to the jovial laughter of her father. I believe that Pa (Charles) is one of the most important characters in the series, as he is such a kind, loyal man; who rarely scolds, and spends his downtime entertaining his family with music from his fiddle, and stories that leave you chuckling. The family, as a whole, are the type of people you would absolutely love to have the chance to know. They are kind to strangers, helpful to neighbors, and both Ma and Pa are two of the most selfless people in literature. The information regarding Rocky Mountain locusts was both interesting, and frightening; but truly provides a wonderful history lesson for the young reader. While the introduction of the devilish Nellie Oleson provides quite a bit of humor, as she and Laura trade insults with one another at almost every meeting between the two. Ingalls did a marvelous job of penning such a cheerful addition to the series; and, thus far, ON THE BANKS OF PLUM CREEK has become my favorite LITTLE HOUSE book yet. A can't-miss addition to the series!

Erika Sorocco
Freelance Reviewer

Pa Loves Ma, Ma Loves Pa, and All's Right With the World!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-18
ON THE BANKS OF PLUM CREEK -- Who could forget the plague of grasshoppers, or spoiled Nellie's encounter with the crab, or Pa's sojourn in the blizzard, among other adventures?

We -- my three homeschooled grandchildren and I -- are going through the Laura Ingalls Wilder series of books for the second time. We read them aloud during story time, and love every minute. These are books written about an American pioneer family in the 1800s with a strong moral compass. In an unsentimental style, the author writes simply of the day-to-day life she experienced firsthand growing up. As the title of this review suggests, a central theme, not only of this book, but the entire series, is that "Pa loves Ma, and Ma loves Pa, and all's right with the world," including in the face of all kinds of adversity and opportunity alike.

I enrich this time for my grandchildren by stopping occasionally to explain and discuss what we are reading about, be it an unusual word usage, a custom no longer practiced, how to do something by hand, historical facts... We have even stopped to do some research and measure out the height of a bear. Our family tradition is that the eldest grandchild (now 11) reads the last page of these books. Otherwise, I usually do the reading. We also try to get started right away on the next book in the series, the same day as we finish the one before, so as not to lose our momentum.

After going through the series the first time, we discovered (almost by accident at the local library) several other series of books, written by other authors, about Laura's great-grandmother Martha in Scotland, her grandmother Charlotte in Boston, and her mother Caroline in Wisconsin, so we decided to start over with the first of those books and carry on through. There is also a series about Laura's daughter Rose which we have not gotten to yet.

Reading through the other series in order has been time well invested. Like Laura, we have strong family roots in Scotland. We have four generations of our family living within close proximity, so my grandchildren know my father, their beloved great-grandfather, quite well, and this series helps them gain a feel of family and historical continuity, generation to generation. (Check for related book series under: Martha Years, Charlotte Years, Caroline Years, Rose Years).

I am investing in and building our own set of all these books in hardcover, having told my grandchildren that I plan to be around to read them to *their* grandchildren!

Literature
Time Windows
Published in Hardcover by Harcourt Children's Books (1991-09-15)
Author: Kathryn Reiss
List price: $17.00
New price: $14.70
Used price: $0.33
Collectible price: $24.00

Average review score:

Loved this book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-22
I read this book for the first time when I was in middle school (about 13 years ago) and I was hooked. I read it a million times throughout the next couple of years and enjoyed it each time. I was drawn in to the point that I thought I was living the book. Recently, I wanted to read this book that I loved long ago and searched for it on Amazon. I am so happy to see that many people love this book and feel the same way that I do. I just became a mom to a little baby girl, and I can't wait for her to enjoy this book as much as I did.

AMAZING!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-27
This is the most amazing book!!!! I don't even know how many times I've read it! It's my favorite book ever and I've read alot of books!!! Strongly recommend!!!

The best book I ever read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-13
My book, Time Windows, by Kathryn Reiss was mysterious and full of suspense. It was so great it kept me up for hours after my bed time. The main character, Miranda, moved to an old house in the middle of nowhere from New York City. At first she doesn't like the house. Then she entered the attic and found a dollhouse that can reveal a secret about her house's past. This book made you feel like you were sitting in the attic with Miranda peering into the windows of the doll house. By Nicole

THIS IS A GOOD BOOK!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-04
I AM ONLY ON PAGE 100 AND ALREADY I LOVE THIS BOOK. I LOVED IT FROM THE FIRST WORD THE END IS EXCITING! [I ALWAYS SPOIL IT BY READING THE END FIRST BUT I WILL NOT TELL YOU ABOUT IT!] I AM 25 AND THE GIRL IN THE BOOK IS THIRTEEN SO I COULD TELL THIS IS FOR YOUNGER PEOPLE BUT I STILL LIKE IT COME AND READ THIS BOOK... IT TAKES YOU FOR A RIDE AND A RIDE OF MYSTERY AND SUSPENSE IT IS SO IF YOU LIKE MYSTERYS AS WELL AS SUPER NATURAL STUFF LIKE I DO COME READ THIS! I JUST WANTED THE AUTHOR OF THIS BOOK TO KNOW THAT SHE DID AN AWESOME JOB!!

A great book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-17
I was fourteen when I read this book. I am now 22, and the impression that this book left with me is still fresh. I would not advise someone under the age of tweleve to read this book. It's a seamlessly weaved tale where the heroine, Miranada, is well prepared by the recent events in her life to take on this mystery. Even so, it is an intense mystery. Although it is a "children's" book, Dorthy's murder is awful. It is necessary to explain why her character is not at rest, but it leaves a haunting impression with the reader long after the book is over.

Literature
Kitchen Table Wisdom: Stories That Heal
Published in Audio Cassette by Audio Literature (1996-09)
Author:
List price: $17.95
New price: $62.36
Used price: $1.62

Average review score:

Sweet book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-06
Beautiful sweet touching book that helped me get me through some tough times. Celebrates the human spirit

Must Be Present to Win
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-29
Rachel Naomi Remen believes in the healing power of stories. She trained as a pediatrician and expected to practice traditional medicine much as her father and other male members of her family had done before her, but something happened to change her carefully planned course.

In the introduction to Kitchen Table Wisdom, Remen tells how her male colleagues frequently knocked on her office door to ask for her help with a crying patient. They believed that she, as a woman, would know what to do. Though she knew no more than they, she felt flattered that they came to her and felt that this helped her be more a part of their exclusive "Old Boys Network." She began to spend more and more time listening to patients share their fears and feelings of living with a terminal disease.

Since the age of fifteen, Remen has suffered from Crohn's disease. As she listened to her patients, she began to feel less lonely and isolated. Probably, her guidance and uncanny understanding of her patients stemmed from her familiarity with physical and emotional pain.

Kitchen Table Wisdom is a compilation of eighty-eight poignant stories that Remen heard over many years, as well as stories of her own life. Her stories demonstrate her belief that a larger process is at work in all our lives and that human beings are "unfinished, a work in progress." She believes we come into the world whole but lose faith in our wholeness and become discouraged by feelings of not being pretty enough, smart enough, etc. " ... our wholeness exists in us now," she writes, "Trapped though it may be, it can be called upon for guidance, direction and most fundamentally, comfort."

No retelling of Remen's stories can do them justice. One of my favorites is "The Question"--a story told by a patient named Tim (now a cardiologist) of his experience at the age of fifteen with his father, who was in the last stages of Alzheimer¹s disease. At the time, his father had not spoken for ten years and was totally helpless. Tim and his brother were alone with their father when he suddenly slumped over and fell to the floor. The brother was calling 911 when both boys heard a voice commanding, "Don't call 911, son. Tell your mother that I love her. Tell her that I am all right." With those words, the man died. An autopsy later revealed that Tim's father's brain had been entirely destroyed by the disease. Tim never stops wondering who spoke those final words. He tells Dr. Remen, "Much of life can never be explained but only witnessed."

The author believes that talking about and sharing one¹s feelings revives memories that can lead to important new insights about one¹s life, bringing about a healing that formal treatment is unable to offer. She says that Shamans believe illness is a direct indication of soul loss. The soul, she explains, is that which is aware of the sacredness we carry and the sacredness that exists in the external world as well. Losing our appreciation for our sacredness, living with sadness, with feelings of unworthiness can manifest illness.

"Life is the ultimate teacher...," she writes. "It is through experience, and not scientific knowledge or expert academic training alone that we learn our deepest lessons." In her lectures and writings, Dr. Remen likes to tell of a sign on the wall of a room in Florida where the elderly come to play Bingo. It reads, "You Have to Be Present to Win." And so it is in life.

by Duffie Bart
for Story Circle Book Reviews
reviewing books by, for, and about women

An easy-to-read prescription..
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-26
...from a very wise doctor. Gathering readers around her kitchen table, Dr. Remen takes an indirect but inspiring approach to those of us who sometimes prefer to avoid the doctor's office.

A truly healing book.

thinking positively
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-06
I am presurgery and this book helps to calm me and encourage me to think positively.

Extraordinary book
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-24
For years I refused to read this book after a friend's recommendation thinking that it would be another "feel good" attempt . Boy was I wrong! This book is one of the most extraordinary pieces of writing I have ever encountered. I have read it over and over again many times (the stories are short enough that allow you to read at your own pace). It has actually become sort of a "guide to Life" for me. Furthermore, as story-telling itself goes, is simply masterful. Dr. Remen is a powerful communicator and her wisdom goes beyond "new age". It is a groundbreaking work about mystery, awe and Life with a capital "L".

Literature
Partners in Necessity
Published in Paperback by Meisha Merlin Publishing, Inc. (2000-02-01)
Authors: Sharon Lee, Steve Miller, and Michael Herring
List price: $22.00
New price: $22.00
Used price: $13.25

Average review score:

memorable characters
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-20
The plot keeps things moving along, but what makes these novels great is the characters. Real conflict, real choices to make, and real growth over time as well. Quite a world, and quite a story. I particularly liked the first of the three novels collected here.

this is wonderful writing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-29
This is a story for people like me who love a good story.whatever the label. These are people like you and me, who laugh, love, care, hurt, You rejoice with their triumphs and cry with their sorrows. It will stay on my bookshelf forever

Absolutely Wonderful - DO NOT MISS THIS ONE!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-30
Partners in Necessity is an omnibus edition of three novels: Conflict of Honors, Agent of Change & Carpe Diem.

Conflict of Honors: Priscilla Delacroix y Mendoza left her homeplanet when she was only sixteen, convicted of blasphemy and exiled to be homeless and clanless, but she survived. Ten years later, after working her share of grunt jobs, she was the cargo master on the Daxflan, a Liaden ship captained by Sav Rid Olanek. It wasn't an easy job as Terrans were treated like second-class citizens and the second mate, Dagmar, kept trying to "charm" her into a relationship, but Priscilla could not afford to leave the ship and damage her reputation so she stayed. Then Priscilla discovered that the Captain had taken on a cargo of illegal drugs and passed them off as innocent pharmaceuticals. Priscilla tried to hide her knowledge, but she found herself knocked out and locked up on a second-class planet with no money, no job and a resume that now claimed she was a thief.

Priscilla knew that she had to get off the planet and hunt down the Daxflan, if for nothing else than to reclaim her possessions, so she turned to the only ship in orbit at the time - the Dutiful Passage captained by Shan yos'Galan. Unbelievably, the Captain hired her as a pet librarian and then proceeded to help her with pilot and leadership training. Priscilla did not know quite how to react to the friendship of those aboard the Dutiful Passage, but she slowly started to think of the ship as her home. But Dagmar and Captain Olanek were not going to let Priscilla escape and they had a score to settle against Shan yos'Galan, her beloved Captain and source of protection...

Agent of Change: Val Con yos'Phelium, Clan Korval, future Delm and Second Speaker, was just doing a routine mission on some backwater planet in the middle of the universe when his life changed. After completing his mission, he encountered a small spitfire of a woman and saved her life, for which she promptly repaid him by bashing his head in. When Val Con woke up, the spitfire dumped him, but Val Con was intrigued, so he followed her and saved her life again. Now Miri Robertson, whose life he had saved twice, was forced to deal with Val Con, honor demanded it. She was intrigued by Val Con, whom she nicknamed "Tough Guy", but definitely didn't want a partner. As a former mercenary and bodyguard, she could handle herself and, as a target for the powerful Juntavas crime ring, she couldn't trust anyone...

However, both Val Con and Miri, both of whom were used to working alone, soon found that they worked well as partners, at least they would if Miri would stop trying to ditch Val Con at every opportunity. Val Con knew that Miri was something special, she made him feel things that he hadn't felt in years, she made him feel alive again. Miri didn't know what was wrong with Val Con, but she knew it had something to do with what he called The Loop, some kind of brain implant that gave him the odds of success on every mission/action he made. As they grew closer together, both Val Con and Miri realized that the Department of the Interior, who had trained Val Con as an agent, must have some ulterior motive in plan. But in order to find out what it was, they had to stay alive...

Carpe Diem: Val Con his lifemate, Miri Robertson were ordered not to be harmed by the Juntavas syndicate. However, personal interpretation of 'not be harmed' left Val Con and Miri on a broken-down spaceship in the middle of nowhere with the enemy Yxtrang ready to kill them for the hunk of junk they were sitting in. However, Val Con and Miri managed to rig something together and 'jumped' to one of the nearest planets - a backwater world named Vandar.

Vandar had no contact with the outside universe and didn't even know that other cultures existed. With no spaceships and no radio comm that they could use, Val Con and Miri tried to resign themselves to a long stay and set about learning the culture and the language. Meanwhile, Shan yos'Galan, Val Con's brother and his lifemate, Priscilla, began searching the galaxy for him, as did Edger and Sheather, Val Con's Clutch brothers. Back on Liad, Nova yos'Galan, Val Con's sister, had translated a cryptic message from Val Con that, while ensuring the Clan of the heir's survival, told them precious little else. But she did discover that the Department of the Interior, a department that seemed shrouded in mystery and determined to conquer the planet of Liad and from there, the universe, was also looking for Val Con. The more she investigated, the more interested the Department became in Clan Korval...until Nova was forced to call Plan B - retreat strategically, trust no one, prepare for all out war....

These are books 3-5 in the Liaden series if you read them chronologically, which I recommend. As with the other books, I simply loved Lee & Miller's characters and world building. They spend time on the details and it shows that they have carefully thought out and executed another masterpiece. I really feel as if I know the Korval family and am taking a remedial course on Liaden etiquette, these books are that well written! If you enjoy any kind of science fiction or space opera then this book has something for you - great characters, lots of action, enemies on all sides, high tech battle sequences, romance, family relations, honor, and much, much more! You can read this book as a stand-alone novel, but I would recommend starting with the prequels (Local Custom & Scout's Progress, also found in omnibus Pilot's Choice), so that you are familiar with Liad and Clan Korval, but, these books were the originals for the Liaden universe and were written first. Also, you definitely should not miss out on any book in the wonderful Liaden universe - all of them are very highly recommended!

Marvelous! Exciting, emotional, well-drawn, ... Read it!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-24
I bought this 3-in-1 (in hardcover), and after reading just one, Lee & Miller immediately moved to the top handful of my favorite authors, and every story I've read since has just seemed to get better than the last! Whether you like "space opera" adventure, contact/conflict-of-cultures plots, emotional (but not graphic) paranormal romance, or just plain excellent writing, the Liaden Universe stories are for you!

Liaden series notes:
This volume contains "Conflict of Honors", "Agent of Change", and "Carpe Diem", the first three tales of the "present" generation of Clan Korval, especially Val Con yos'Phelium and his foster-brother Shan yos'Galan, in plot-chronological order (the 2nd happened to be *published* first).
These are followed by the cliff-hanger "Plan B", and the [conclusion] "I Dare".
The first story ("Conflict of Honors") is all about Shan and his lifemate-to-be, Priscilla Mendoza, but then Val Con and HIS lady, Miri Robertson, take center stage for most of the subsequent volumes - though the rest of the family is far from left out.
"Pilots Choice" is a prequel 2-in-1 ("Local Custom" & "Scout's Progress") featuring Shan & Val Con's *parents* -- and by the way, read these at least before "I Dare"!
The authors' website, Korval.com, includes reference data (FAQs, pronunciation guide, etc.) and a complete bibliography for the series, including many shorter entries NOT available as standard HCs or PBs.

Trust me, if you clicked any link that landed you on this page, you can't help but enjoy these stories!

Lived up to Expectations
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-12
I am pretty strictly a sci-fi reader, and I am very picky about what I will buy. I "research" reviews of books before I buy them to (hopefully) weed out the crap. I was intrigued by the glowing reviews of this book, so I bought it, never having read these authors or this series before. Let me tell you how glad I was that I did...

I devoured this book and immediately got on-line to order all the other books in the series. While I was waiting for them to arrive, I re-read this book. When the others came, I devoured them, and then re-read the whole series!!! I have only re-read one other series because I couldn't bear to say goodbye to the characters, and I have never read a book three times in a row before. I even went to the author's website and bought all the companion short stories. I might seriously consider reading them again--but I ignored so many responsiblilies while reading it the last times that there are piles and piles of other things I ought to do first). There may not be any "profound" messages here, but the story comes together so beautifully, the characters are so vivid and likeable, and the universe is so consistant and interesting that I just don't want to let it go.

So, buy this book... and go ahead and get the rest of them too. You won't regret it.

Literature
Ratha's Creature
Published in Hardcover by Gollancz (1986)
Author: Clare Bell
List price:
Used price: $32.40

Average review score:

Can't miss on this one
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-05
Ratha's creature opens up a whole new world of cats. Long before the Warrior cat series, lived Ratha and her tribe. This book is full of adventure and suspense for any age. I couldn't put it down. Make sure to buy this one first and while you are at it, order the other three so you won't have to stop in the middle of this great adventure. If you love the Warrior Series you will love Ratha's Creature!

Forever Remembered
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-01
The Named Series is a collection that has survived in the hearts of readers for decades, inspiring fanart, fanfiction, and more. Here is the book that started it all - Ratha's Creature, an epic, memorable tale of strife, forgiveness, and triumph. This novel resurrects an ancient world and delivers in full detail, the savage brutality endured by those of arcane laws, a code of claws and fangs - while thrusting into harsh, honest light, what it means to question and discover the meaning of 'Self Awareness'.
Lion King worshipers, Warriors devotees, Animal enthusiasts - you have not stalked the feline path, until you have unearthed these treasures.

For more information, copy and paste the following links:

Clare Bell's official domain:
www.rathascourage.com
For an exclusive look including fanart, fanfiction, and more visit Trails Of Conquest:
www.trailsofconquest.webs.com
For Named (Ratha) Series Cat Role Play (rp) stop by Into The Mist:
www.intothemistrp.webs.com

Fantastic story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-11
I am a huge cat fan and I can't believe that this book has existed for so long without my knowledge! I loved it from the very beginning and the story drew me in. I quickly ordered the other books to read. Any adventure or cat fan should read this book. If you do not love cats or do not have a fasination with animals you will soon. The book, while fictional is very realisitic and the characters are very wild and "animal-like." I cannot wait to read more. I genuinely feel the loss of one character in particular...sigh. Read this book! It is a great escape. Welcome to Ratha's world.

My Favorite Childhood Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-17
I never write reviews, but Ratha's Creature is the exception. I came upon this book as a 7th grader back in the early 90's and it was out of print even then. This book is fantastic, with it's prehistoric world and it's memorable characters. I am thrilled to see it released again so children can have the same experience that I had at their age in reading this wonderful story. This is a must read! In a world where the Harry Potter series is over and kids are left wondering what to read next, this one is a fun series and you will not regret your time in reading it, only regret that there is not more. Read it, you won't be sorry.

Excellent Story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-31
Clare Bell is a great author who's works have been too long out of print. I read this story when I was a kid, and am enjoying it just as much now that I am older. A really imaginative, fun tale.

Literature
Some Things That Stay: A Novel
Published in Hardcover by Diane Pub Co (2000-01-01)
Author: Sarah Willis
List price: $24.00
New price: $24.00

Average review score:

A Nice Coming of Age Story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-16
This is a really touching coming of age story in the 50's. The mother has to go to a sanitarium with Tuburculosis. The father is stuck in his own world of painting. There are 2 siblings, Robert and Megan, that are coping in their own ways with the abandoment issues that arise from not only the mother's illness, but the father's inability to handle the situation. Tamara is left basically in charge of everyone. Besides the obvious issues that are going on, there is the storyline of the number of moves the family has endured and how much they are wanting a permanent home.

I enjoyed reading this book very much, but it didn't touch me as much as some of the other coming of age stories like, Whistling in the Dark, The Book of Bright Ideas and Cold Rock River. Those stayed with me after I was done and while I really enjoyed this coming of age story, it's not one that will stay with me like some other ones.

Still it is well worth reading and I highly recommend it.

What a good book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-24
This is a story you were waiting to read, full of life-size characters... the type of book you don't want to finish.

And a first novel? ... wow. I can't wait to read her next one!!!!

Just LOVED this book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-26
I just love Sarah Willis' writing style and felt this book was equally as wonderful as her book: THE SOUND OF US. It didn't take too long for me to be totally drawn into this story of Tamara and I felt myself rather sad at where the story ended. I just wanted to keep knowing about her and her family and how their lives turned out. I highly recommend this book and hope anyone who reads it becomes a Sarah Willis fan. If you haven't yet read THE SOUND OF US, do yourself a favor and read it! It's real good reading. There isn't a single downside to SOME THINGS THAT STAY. I loved Tamara and her view of her world. The characters seemed utterly real and engrossing. The last sentence of the book was the perfect uplifting end to Tamara's story.

A quietly memorable coming-of-age in a bygone era...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-22
At fifteen, Tamara Anderson hates being different. But thanks to her parents' free-thinking ways and vagabond spirit - totally contrary to the conventional 1950s American lifestyle - Tamara and her younger siblings Robert and Megan start over in a new school each year. In fact, moving every spring is about the only thing the trio CAN count on.

The year of 1954, however, things are different in a way that no one could ever have anticipated. Tamara's mother has become sluggish, no longer seeming to care about her former passions. At night, she coughs incessantly, as the family tries to pretend nothing is wrong.

Meanwhile, the family's acquaintance with their new neighbors, the Murphys, threatens them spiritually and emotionally. The Murphys - especially eldest daughter Helen - are devout Baptists, intent on "saving" the atheist Andersons.

Yet despite her parent's vehement objections, Tamara finds that she's eager to embrace the concept of God. She wonders about his nature, why he would let her mother become ill - and whether God might just be the only thing left to save her family from total disaster.

This quietly-told story of a young girl's coming of age, their struggles to stay afloat both physically and emotionally when they're faced with the possible loss ofo their mother, and the idea of what really constitutes conventionality is bound to leave an impression upon readers' minds.

Great Book Club Selection
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-22
In the spring of 1954, Tamara Anderson is fifteen when her family moves into the pretty farmhouse across the road from the tar-papered house. Tamara is the oldest of three children. Her father is a painter whose landscapes require new locations for inspiration. The family moves yearly arriving weeks before the end of one school year and leaving weeks before the completion of the next.

Some things that stay is a coming of age story in which Tamara faces more than the standard fair of parental misunderstanding, sexual awakening and sibling confrontations. Raised in an extremely liberal, atheist family, Tamara has of none of the body/sex hang-ups so many of us grew up with and her sexual awakening is refreshingly guilt-free. Moving constantly, she dreams of stability and a more-than-fleeting connection into society. In the course of the story, she tries out the Baptist church with the neighbors from the tar-paper house--neighbors who are more than the junky cars littering their front yard. In light of her atheistic upbringing, Tamara's contemplation of God, organized religion, prayer, and fate vs faith adds an interesting layer. She faces ethical dilemmas, maternal illness, paternal selfishness, and, of course, sexual awakening.

A deep, meaty story, Sarah Willis' Some things that stay is a great book club selection. My book club read it and loved it. The concepts raised yielded plenty of spirited conversation. I recommend it.

Reviewed by: Laurel Bradley, Author of A Wish in Time
A Wish In Time

Literature
The Wheel of Time: Eye of the World, the Great Hunt, Dragon Reborn, Shadow Rising, Fires of Heaven, Lord of Chaos, Crown of Swords, and Path of Daggers
Published in Hardcover by Tor Books (2000-01)
Author: Robert Jordan
List price:

Average review score:

The best Fantasy Series ever Written
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-24
The World of Wheel of Time is the most complex one I have ever read in a fantasy series.Jordan analyzes it's culture of his world,making it to come alive in our eyes as we turn the pages.His work is perhaps the best ever written in fantasy.

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-25
In terms of plot complexity, this series is astounding. Thousands of plots combine to form the pattern of the age which in turn forms the age lace: the pattern of ages. A thousand pages pass without a single significant event. Of course, many would consider this a flaw, though personally I see it as the novels' best characteristic. I hope Robert Jordan never finishes the series. The only flaw is that it lacks a true ethos to present to the reader; I wholly disaprove of the simple good v. evil aspect of the work. Nonetheless, Jordan does understand that are not inherently good or evil, demonstrating this with the humanity of many of the forsaken (I suppose I should call them the Chosen). Twisted humanity in many, but humanity nonetheless. The best aspect of the novels is the complexity and personality description of the characters, especially women. Jordan vividly portrays the characters' thoughts, often angering the reader with their ignorance, while creating a true sense of reality in a fantasy world. In short, there are few flaws and many strong points, well worthy of a five star rating. Anyone know who Tel Janin is :)

Do you have je'etoh? Do you know what that even means..?
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-21
All I have to say is incredible. The races are excellent. I used to run many a campaign in D&D when I was a kid.. and I tell you what.. I have only to wish to have developed such a fantasy world. I became engulfed and whisked away to the world of Amerylin ..Prophecy and a Dragon reborn..

I can only tell you that if you do not beware Aiel.. you are certain to meet death ...

And that the color of a robe means nothing as to if their loyal to the side of good... and then how do you determine good?

Should the Dragon Reborn be stilled..?

SO much so many ..

THE WHEEL WEAVES AS THE WHEEL WILLS
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-31
Robert Jordan's Wheel Of Time series is a compelling selection of stories to read. Never before in fantasy have I found myself beginning to think, talk, and act like the characters in the stories, and now I find myself melding reality with WOT. There are many round characters, all changing, making new discoveries, and being very human. Anyone who doesn't read this amazing series is missing out on a lot.

An adventurous break from reality
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-25
I was involved in a motor cycle accident that put me in a bed for 2 months, and all I had to do was read. I have never been a fan of fantasy, because the stories were all simple and were not REAL enough. A friend of mine gave me the first book and at first I hesitated, but it would have been the worst mistake in my life if I had not read it. Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time series astonished me. I never thought I could find any book so captivating, and I have read a lot of books. He has brought the fantasy world a book that to my belief will never be surpassed. In the book several characters are pulled from their everyday live and thrown into the worst possible senario, in which they find out who they really are while trying to stay alive and seal the prison of the dark one. This story has so many twists and turns that it is almost impossible to believe. I found myself thinking that I was Rand and when that book was over wondering were his world ended and reality began. I feel as though I have been through all the hardships with them and they are all my friends. I do not want this story to end. After book 9 and 10 I hope that atleast he takes on another series, with the same characters so I don't have to loose all that I already have with Rand, Perrin, Matt, Egwenn, ect. Words cannot even begin to describe this wonderful story that you must read.

Literature
Les Miserables (Modern Library)
Published in Hardcover by Modern Library (1992-09-05)
Author: Victor Hugo
List price: $25.95
New price: $15.94
Used price: $5.33
Collectible price: $25.00

Average review score:

Only One Real Problem... type set
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-04
I have enjoyed my varied attempts at reading this book. I enjoyed the various presentations on Stage (except Anthony Perkins replaying another bad guy doesn't work for me) My major problem lies in obtaining a large print copy (even in several volumes). Amazon has almost two pages of books, number, etc. Doesn't someone take mercy on us poor souls that don't qualify as visually impaired legally.

We should be better for reading it...
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-28
... but this was the most popular book, read by soldiers, North and South, during our Civil War. We should be better for hearing democracy in Beethoven, piety in Bach, compassion in Mozart -- and perhaps we do, one person at a time, but I fear we are always running out of time.

I read this book thirty years ago, over two winters, setting it down midway in March 1977 I believe. I had heard a near-complete reading on NPR, spread over at least a month of Saturday afternoons. I always made sure I was home for that; I was a single parent, then, father of a seven year old boy. To use a cheap term of the day, I could 'relate' to Jean Valjean, and I was thrilled by the music that opened each episode: the March to the Scaffold from Berlioz' "Symphony Fantastique." After the final episode, I went out and bought the Modern Library Giant, and began to read.

The radio production was not complete! While I found the details surrounding the Battle of Waterloo truly informative -- the description of the battlefield as a captial A was a vivid model of simplicity -- the long section on the history of the nuns' order where Valjean and his young ward take refuge, and where she is educated, invited a lot of skimming.

Skim where you will, but try to read the complete book. At some later time you can return to those pages you skimmed, and discover what you missed.

Les Miserable, The Brothers Karamazov, War and Peace, Moby-Dick, Joseph and His Brothers, Remembrance Of Things Past (okay, In Search Of Lost Time), Ulysses -- all of these demand much of us, particularly our time. That is a good thing, considering the many ways modern life invites us to waste time, and I could not begin to choose the best among these. Fortunately I don't have to; I might run to "As I Lay Dying" or "Lord Jim" instead.

Meanwhile, I'm glad I devoted a chunk of my life to this book. I do know I emerged a better man for that, and how sad I was when I read the final page, and closed the book.

Les Miserables
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-25
This is an excellent translation of the classic Les Miserables by Victor Hugo. The section on the Battle of Waterloo makes the reader feel as if he were actually present. This is only one of the memorable parts of this wonderful book. My advise-don't waste your time on an abridged version of this book!

The mind of a genius, the work of a lifetime
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-10
As close to flawless as you could come, no other author can match the storytelling and characterisation. Describes a turbulent period in France, with incredible political and social commentary. Hugo's monumental work explores many themes i.e. why the Restoration was a backward step, the difference between a revolution and a riot; he describes many life's experiences and emotions: the myriad ways people can fall between the cracks into destitution (Fantine, Montepercy); one of the greatest descriptions of falling in love (Marius and Cosette) and how it feels to be in love, the greatest description of a battle (Waterloo), the desperation of a convict (reminds of Henry Charrier -Papillon), the making of men (Marius), unbounding heroism and selflessness(Eponine, Jean Valjean); explores patience, loss, asceticism, rebellion, fulfillment, nationalism, the administation of justice and the overriding theme is CONSCIENCE. I read this and then discovered that Hugo's own daughter lived in Barbados for a number of years living 'on the edge' of destitution. Small world.

Be ready for repetition!
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-20
This book was written before novels were popularized and thus was written in parts. To bring readers up to speed, many sections of Les Miserables are repetitive. Likewise, there are also many drawn-out sections on the French Revolution.

There are reasons this book is abridged over and over again. It has little to do with length!

I do recommend this version, however. It is the original, unabridged edition by one of Hugo's friends (so you know it's accurate with what Hugo wanted). Start from the beginning, and if you hit a repetitive section or a long section about the French Revolution, don't be afraid to skim over it.

Though it is impressive to say "I've read the Whole Thing," swallow your pride--some sections are honestly not interesting unless you are a real scholar of the French Revolution.

Oh, by the way, this is the greatest story ever written--hands down.

Literature
Life and Fate
Published in Hardcover by Collins Harvill Press (1985-01)
Author: Vasilii Semenovich Grossman
List price:
Used price: $163.53

Average review score:

A better than you'd expect soviet era novel
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-27
With the exception of Bulgakov I don't care much for Soviet literature. I could never finish Dr. Zhivago or Quiet Flows the Don. This book I did enjoy. Particularly the parts that dealt with the jewish physicist (I forgot his name) and his family. The letter he receives from his mother before she's deported is probably the most memorable part of the novel. Some people compare it to War and Peace. I wouldn't go that far but it is good enough that you might want to read it again as I plan to some day.

Matchless
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-10
One of the most relevant, startling and magnificent novels never read. Awe-inspiring from start to finish: for the characters themselves, their historical counterparts, the author's world and the world at large. Evokes the Greek idea of "necessity;" no understanding, truth without any value, no solid principles, no foundation. You don't read the story: you tumble through it, terrified, grasping blindly for something to stabilize the free fall.

Read it.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-17
Read it. Completely compelling. If you think the Russians are a mystical and unknowable depth, this book will not disabuse you. Best war novel I ever read.

Read it.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-13
How should you read this novel? In a time frame that's as condensed possible. It is not a book that can be picked up at intervals, as you will lose track of the characters and their complex, interwoven stories. Why should you read this novel? Here are a few reasons. First, for its depiction of the German concentration camps, where Grossman's own mother perished. Second, for the equation it establishes between the crushing power of the Nazi state and the equally destructive power of the Soviet state. Particularly poignant is the fate of the commissar Krymov, an old Bolshevik whose dedication to the state lands him in prison, in the Lubyanka. He comes to understand Stalin's method, to realize that "the hide was being flayed off the still living body of the Revolution so that a new age could slip into it; as for the red, bloody meat, the steaming innards--they were thrown onto the scrapheap. The new age needed only the hide of the Revolution--and this was being flayed off people who were still alive. Those who then slipped into it spoke the language of the Revolution and mimicked its gestures, but their brains, lungs, livers, and eyes were utterly different" (841). Finally, read the novel for the story of Shtrum, the scientist, and its examination of what happens when science must serve the state.

An epic and vivid depiction of moral pollution
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-10
The publication of the massive novel LIFE AND FATE by the Soviet war correspondent and novelist Vasily Grossman was a major event in the West when it was finally published in 1985, twenty five years after it was written. LE MONDE called it "the great Russian novel of the 20th century"--which it is most certainly not. Why would somebody read a Social Realist novel almost as long as the Old Testament (Grossman = 880 pages, God = 996 pages)? In my case, it all started with an interest in the relationship between scientific creativity and literary creativity. One of the most interesting thinkers on that subject is the great Hungarian chemist Michael Polanyi, who shows that spontaneous order can be seen in political, social and economic behaviour. Underlying this order is an ethical foundation which Polanyi identifies with truth and human freedom. Everything else, as Polanyi sees it, is a consequence of the initial decision to choose truth or falsehood, and freedom or constraint. Polanyi was therefore very interested in what was in his day the greatest enemy of freedom and truth, the totalitarian political systems of National Socialism and Leninist-Stalinist Socialism. And this is where LIFE AND FATE, and Grossman's own interests, intersect with Polanyi's thought. Polanyi, himself a great research scientist of the first order (and his son was to win a Nobel Prize), recognised in Communism and Nazism a distorted, materialistic scientific world view that had flourished like a weed within the dramatic rise of science and technology over the last 400 years. Polanyi made the passing remark in MEANING that "There were people who actually transformed philosophic error into destructive human action . . . [they developed within] the intelligentsia of central and eastern Europe. They are the nihilists." Grossman must have been on a similar track in this novel about the rotten foundations of the Soviet system, because he makes a physicist one of his most important characters. The key fact about Grossman was that he was an insider and, for most of his life, a supporter of the Stalinist Soviet system. Unlike Pasternak, Mandelstam, Bulgakov, Solzhenitsyn and the other great Russian poets and writers of the 20th century, who suffered persecution, imprisonment, torture, death and / or exile, Grossman was for most of his career a pet of the senior Soviet heirarchy. Trained as a chemist (like Polanyi and the chaos / complexity theorist Prigogine), Grossman was a feted war journalist like Ilya Ehrenberg--and like Isaac Babel a generation before, although Babel was executed in one of Stalin's early purges. Grossman is almost as good a writer as Babel, but he survived long enough to have a crisis of conscience and write about it, unlike Babel, who disappeared into the Lubyanka. So the great interest of LIFE AND FATE is this conflict between lies and truth that Grossman is struggling with personally as a human being and writer throughout the novel. Fortunately for me, before beginning LIFE AND FATE I had started Nadezhda Mandelstam's memoir HOPE AGAINST HOPE, and was half way through, before I started LIFE AND FATE. Mandelstam's memoir provides a clear perspective on the corrupt ethical environment of the Soviet Union which, in LIFE AND FATE, remains murkier. The novel is deeply flawed as a literary work because of its author's unresolved struggle, but as a document of the human spirit trying to overcome its crippled and diseased state, it is fascinating. LIFE AND FATE opens with a powerful evocation of a Nazi concentration camp, and almost the last chapter is a nightmarish vision of the future in which Stalinist gulags merge with global society into an indistinguishable system in which not just manual labour, but all intellectual effort and creativity, is enslaved to the State. In between Grossman makes increasingly explicit comparisons between Leninism-Stalinism and the Nazi system, which was no doubt a major reason the novel couldn't be published in the Soviet Union during his life time. The over-arching plot is a dual track account of the defense of Stalingrad in 1942 and the establishment and operation of the Nazi extermination camp system. Yes, a big downer of a book. On the surface, Grossman would appear to be contrasting the heroic Soviet defeat of the German 6th Army at Stalingrad with the industrial-scale moral obscenity of the Nazi's Final Solution, but in fact the entire novel demonstrates the numerous similarities between the two arenas and the systems that created them. Grossman depicts a kind of anti-Polanyi universe. Polanyi famously described a Republic of Science in which tens of thousands of scientists around the world, each individually commmitted to the truth, continually share information and calibrate their own personal understanding of nature by freely sharing information and interpretations with one another, and then checking this against the data that new experiments report about empirical reality. Grossman shows a Soviet system in which millions of people lie and denounce one another in order to avoid personally coming to the attention of the vast secret police network as an "enemy of the people". Instead of a continous flow of truth and new information, Grossman shows how a vast ocean of lies swirls through the Soviet system, putting literally everyone at immediate risk of arrest, humiliation, torture, imprisonment and / or execution, a fate which millions of innocent people suffered. LIFE AND FATE is a strange book, because in large sections Grossman still writes like a convinced Bolshevik, in others he appears to be trying to write in such a way that the book will slip through the censors, and in many passages he just takes the gloves off and writes about the truth--ie in a way which indicts the murderous nature of the Stalinist system. To untangle these different sections, it would be helpful to read Strauss's PERSECUTION AND THE ART OF WRITING before taking on LIFE AND FATE. For example, a scene in which the characters toast a portrait on the wall of Stalin and refer to what a wonderful leader and great human being Stalin is, almost imperceptibly turns into subtle, but strong, criticism of Stalin. At other times, Grossman puts some of the strongest criticisms of Stalin and Stalinism into the mouths of crazy, criminal, or doomed characters. But the overall comparison between Stalinism and Nazism is so obvious that it is hard to imagine how Grossman thought he would get away with it. In addition, however, there are numerous passages which justify terror as a legitimate tool against real "class enemies", if not necessarily all the "excesses" commmitted against imaginary class enemies. Grossman is himself clearly deeply conflicted, as a prominent writer of the Soviet era, who benefited for most of his career from its system. He seems to have gone along with the nightmares of the late 20s and the Great Terror of 1937, only becoming disillusioned when the murderous, and potentially mass-scale, anti-Jewish persecution ("the so-called 'Doctor's Plot'") was about to be unleashed by Stalin just before Stalin's death. Because Grossman supports terror as a legitimate tool against class enemies, LIFE AND FATE stands as a tainted monument to its era, and to the moral corruption of its author. LIFE AND FATE ends rather abruptly without completing the many plot lines or resolving any of the tensions in its pro- and anti-Soviet depiction of reality. Grossman himself, by the time he died of cancer in 1964, was apparently deeply depressed, just like many of the characters he depicted in LIFE AND FATE who suddenly realise that the ruthless ideals to which they had devoted their lives, and sacrificed their family and friends, were nightmarish lies. Perhaps Grossman did finally recognise and accept the full truth, but if he did, he wasn't able to write about it in a document that survives. By comparison to LIFE AND FATE, the tragic clarity of Nadezhda Mandelstam's HOPE AGAINST HOPE is like a glass of pure water.


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Literature-->14
Related Subjects: Festivals Journals Performance Myths and Folktales Reviews and Criticism Awards and Bestsellers Online Reading Biography Cultural Reading Groups Short Stories Magazines and E-zines Electronic Text Archives Directories Periods and Movements Authors Poetry Drama Genres Children's
More Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250