Vermont Books


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Vermont Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Vermont
Wildflowers of Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont (Wildflowers of Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont)
Published in Paperback by Syracuse University Press (2001-02)
Authors: Arleen R. Bessette, William K. Chapman, and Valerie A. Chapman
List price: $24.95
New price: $16.16
Used price: $12.98

Average review score:

easy to use photos
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-23
This book has photos of around 350 wildflowers with a paragraph describing the pertinent details of each. They are arranged by color and are very easy to use. If you are looking for help separating extremely similar species, or want range maps, this is not the book for you, but for putting a name to the flower you just found it is excellent.

Vermont
The woodburners encyclopedia: An information source of theory, practice and equipment relating to wood as energy
Published in Unknown Binding by Vermont Crossroads Press (1978)
Author: John Winthrop Shelton
List price:
Used price: $16.00

Average review score:

IMHO
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-26
I'm sorry this book is out of print. When I read it the first time I had just moved to New England from southern California. I had been around wood stoves in my life but never really operated one, I just knew I wanted one. Especially since this was the late '70s when fuel was a big deal. This book taught me more about wood stoves and fireplaces than I ever thought there was to know. Not only does it explain exactly why things do what they do and make sense to the layman but it tells you the theory so you can carry that information with you forever. You'll learn about air infiltration and the migration of air through houses. The light went on about a lot of things I had noticed but had no clue why it was occuring. I'm very happy I own this book. I was going to buy another one for a friend that just bought a wood stove.

Vermont
Yankee Weather Proverbs
Published in Paperback by Vermont People Books (1992)
Author: Peter Miller
List price:

Average review score:

Beautiful!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-16
I bought this book sight-unseen, because I'd seen pictures of the artist's work. At this modest price, what could I lose? I wasn't disappointed. The book is lovely. You can get a good idea of her style by clicking on the book and looking at the front & back covers. Or go to her website. If you can't buy her original artwork, the book is a nice alternative.

Vermont
Shade of the Maple
Published in Paperback by Cantwell Hamilton Pr (2002-02)
Author: Kirk Martin
List price: $14.00
New price: $5.90
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $14.00

Average review score:

I really WANTED to like this book ....
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-29
I really wanted to like this book but just couldn't. All the incredients were there for a wonderful story, but it fell far short of the mark. I hung in there and read the entire thing (thinking it had to get better) but I was overly optimistic.

I LOVE Vermont and have spent time in the geographic locations described. The descriptions of the area were the one redeeming feature. Having been there, it was easy to picture the locale and was fairly well described. My main complaint was the stilted language used in the book when describing how the characters interact. Conversations between them were stiff or overly sugary and painful to read. I think had this been turned into a college comp class the best grade it would have received would have been a "C".

Any comparisons to Nicholas Sparks's work does Mr. Sparks a great disservice. While Mr. Sparks doesn't write great literature that will last through the ages, his books are enjoyable. This one was not.

I don't get it.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-14
Unbelievable. Come on... a love story? Hooey! I bought this book because of the great reviews here. What a disappointment. The characters are not believable and neither are the choices they made. The best part is the descriptive writing about the countryside and the seasons. It's nice that the author donates some proceedes to breast cancer.

Just Beautiful
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-30
I received this book as a Christmas gift from a friend whose child has been helped immensely by the author through his Celebrate!ADHD program for kids with learning disabilities.

I had heard wonderful things about his work with kids and charities. So I was so surprised to find that he was also able to write an incredibly touching and beautiful love story.

I guess now that I have kids, I really value the simplicity, innocence and purity of love that lasts a lifetime. Maybe that's what made this book so special to me.

It's not a literary classic and at times he is a bit overdescriptive, but he does understand the human heart. Now I can see why he's so good with kids. All in all, a simple, very beautiful love story that will stay with you for days after you put it down.

Still believe in the magic of love...
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-11
I met the author a couple weeks ago. He was speaking at our school about positive ways to encourage and teach children with ADHD. It was a truly fascinating approach, and after reading his book,Celebrate ADHD, I am amazed at the difference it has made already in my classroom.

He spoke a little bit about his novels and warned the audience that they were not to be confused with the works of Faulkner or Fitzgerald--rather, they are innocent, but very heartfelt love stories. One is about the love between a father and his son (which he said is autobiographical).

I read Gifted last week, and it it truly an amazing story about three unlikely friends who battle their demons and help each other overcome them. I really, really loved this story.

And last night, I picked up Shade of the Maple. I just put it down and have to admit that it took my breath away a bit. The love between the main characters is something I haven't experienced before--it is simple, which makes it all the more appealing to me.

The main difference I've seen in reviewers isn't about the quality of the writing. As an English teacher, I can say the author is right--he's no Falkner, but he's no slouch, either. These are well-constructed stories from beginning to end. He creates lovely pictures that make it easy to see the story in your head. The main difference seems to be that those who believe in the innocence of love, peoplewho generally have a hopeful or romantic notion of love, really enjoy this book. Those who are perhaps a bit more jaded or prefer reading stories of tragedy and heartache will not like this book.

I will always treasure this story.

Only for the really simple-minded
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-01
I suggest that if you are buying this book based on these reviews, you take the time to actually read all of them (including the one star reviews). There is a consistent theme here of either "I LOVED it" or "this is simplistic nonsense."

I am fully in the simplistic nonsense camp. Maybe you should decide what type of reviewers you are more likely to agree with - romance novel readers or, shall we say, higher-level, quality fiction readers. This book will only satisfy the most immature reader out there. I hate to be mean about it, but it really reads like something an overly starry eyed and ambitious high school freshman girl would write. It's very, very whimpy, and worse than that, very amateurish.

Vermont
Crossing to Safety
Published in Hardcover by Thorndike Pr (1988-11)
Author: Wallace Earle Stegner
List price: $18.95
Used price: $6.82

Average review score:

No pain, no gain
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-01
`How do you make a book that anyone will read out of lives as quiet as these?' asks the author of his own characters, about two thirds through Crossing to Safety; that seems to be the challenge Stegner set himself.

The novel, running from the 1930s to the 70s, revolves around the friendship between two couples, the Langs and the Morgans, in which the men are both literature professors. The Langs are rich and endowed with extended families and the Morgans are self-made and orphans. They all lead full lives in which they remain by-and-large happily married.

Stegner is erudite, and he obviously loves the places he describes, from Madison, Wisconsin to Florence and including the secluded lakeside spot in New England where much of the book is set. But it is difficult to identify with characters whose lives are so uneventful. From the beginning, one of the protagonists is dying, but because the story is told from the perspective of the old Larry Morgan, that only comes out as looking back on a life well spent. The characters barely struggle, and when they do, Stegner chooses to skirt around their conflicts. The reader is left to enjoy his detailed and moody descriptions, his poetic quotes, and the contrasts between the depression and post-war eras: pleasant because the book is well written, but not very exciting.

`You don't,' would be my answer to Stegner's question. Judging from other reviews, obviously, I've come to the wrong conclusion.

Fabulous!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-18
Beautifully written, provocative, and enduring. Hated for it to end. Wanted to reread it immediately.

One of the best books I have ever read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-14
Wallace Stegner is simply one of our finest writers and this book is great on so many levels. Remarkably little happens in the story, and yet he brings you so close to the characters that you can't take your eyes off of them. He won the Pulitzer for "Angle of Repose," which is also great, but I found Safety a far speedier, enjoyable read. If you have an intellectual bone in your head, you cannot go wrong with this.

Enticing story of friendship -
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-07
I couldn't put this book down. However, my complaint is the self-indulgent writing of Stegner's - he always seems to be winking at himself as he describes certain scenarios, attitudes of characters, etc..

It gets to be tiring... and the writing style is totally outdated! Not timeless!

Crossing To Safety
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-09
Crossing to Safety by Wallace Stegner is one of the finest books my book club has read. The beauty of the prose along with an engaging story had my enjoyment level up there. I definitely want to read this prize winning author's other works. I can't understand where his catalog of fiction has been all my life.

Vermont
Witness
Published in Hardcover by Scholastic Press (2001-09-01)
Author: Karen Hesse
List price: $16.95
New price: $3.35
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $16.95

Average review score:

WITNESS (MS)
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-26
The witness is irresistible it is packed with action. It is about a little black girl and a jewish girl that are in this little town in Vermont when the KKK come to town. As the bystanders of the town watch as their town crumbles. But in the end the bystanders become the heroes. The witness is a great book to do a book report on. Karen Hesse won the New berry Award for her book "Out of the dust." The witness was written for Jean Feiwel . I recommend this book to students in 6th, 7th, and [...] because it is perfect for a book report. This book is historical fiction. I strongly recommend this book!

WITNESS
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-26
The witness is irresistible it is packed with action. It is about a little black girl and a jewish girl that are in this little town in Vermont when the KKK come to town. As the bystanders of the town watch as their town crumbles. But in the end the bystanders become the heroes. The witness is a great book to do a book report on. Karen Hesse won the New berry Award for her book "Out of the dust." The witness was written for Jean Feiwel . I recommend this book to students in 6th, 7th, and 8th grade because it is perfect for a book report. This book is historical fiction. I strongly recommend this book!

Witness
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-29
[...]
How would you like to live in where the KKK is like Leona and Ester had to when they were young? That was in 1924.In the book Witness by Karen Hesse, the blacks and Jews were aware of the KKK and watching there backs closely. Mr. Harish gets shot by KKKmember and dies. Ester, Mr. Harish' daughter could have got killed to if she was leaning back a little because she was sitting on her fathers lap. I can't tell you if any one else dies because of the KKK. If you're in to historical fiction you would like this book.
[...]

A good read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-19
This is a really good book.As I was reading this book I felt as if I was in the Vermont town. It showed me that not everyone agreed with the ku klux klan and that they sometimes they had to had to join even though they really didn't agree.

WITNESS
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-25
In discussing the subject of Hate with my eighth grade students, I use WITNESS as an introduction to this difficult topic because of its brilliant subtleties that infuse the subject with multiple perspectives that tells a complete story. Highly reminiscent of the adult play THE LARAMIE PROJECT (which tells the story of Matthew Shepherd -- the young gay man who died after being beaten to death tied to a fence post in Wyoming), the two stories work together to weave a portrait of America that is harsh, cruel, hateful, sad and ugly, but lead to a greater Hope, where justice, clear-headedness and a deep sense of humanity will prevail.

WITNESS wisely puts the voice of the story into different characters: the innocent, the wise, the evil, the confused, the bystander, the individual whose feelings and opinions are affected by the events and people around him/her -- an individual who is tested, and passes.

Do not hesitate in introducing this book to middle- and high-school students. Discuss it with them and let them see the pain and disgusting nature of humankind. Let them discover that humankind can come to its senses and redeem itself from the terrible injustices it serves up. High school students who can handle some pretty harsh language can then move onto THE LARAMIE PROJECT and experience a similar feeling dealing with an real-life incident of Hate and its repercussions, but in modern terms.

The book (perfect as reader's theatre in the classroom) is recommended at the highest level. Excellent storytelling in a pitch perfect form.

Vermont
Three Wishes
Published in Hardcover by Simon & Schuster (1997-09-08)
Author: Barbara Delinsky
List price: $23.00
New price: $0.73
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $23.00

Average review score:

I mourned!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-30
This love story was very enjoyable to ride along and enjoy--yet, realists as many of us are believe it's almost too good to be real. I felt Ms. Delinsky hints she believes she felt the same way. The ending didn't ruin the "too good to be real" love story, it imitated love stories that are few, but all too true, around the world. As someone mentioned in another review, "it was a daring story line!"

This story is comforting--yet disconcerting too (for someone like me whose marriage was wrong from the start)--because Tom and Bree had what we all seek and yet few find. Would living through grief of utter devastation be worth a love described as theirs? Given the choice, seriously, I would say yes. I have never come close to feeling or receiving anything close. To love another and be loved in entirety is a life worth having lived, no matter the length. I think this was the point of the book. Ms. Delinsky's story line might have developed from a philosophical discussion like this one one night with her friends.

Finally, when the father returned to the son, although I expected and awaited it, I did not expect it exactly where Ms. Delinsky placed it. I plotted along with her, and in my dreams I conjured up Bree's last wish too. It must have been exciting to know where you placed that climatic one line, "...standing a short distance across the newly tamped snow was his father" created a storm of emotions for your friends and editor, knowing it would do the same to us, your readers. Did you cry as you typed that one line, Ms. Delinsky? Did you suck in a gasp of breath and stop typing and hold your hands together? Right then, Oh! I was sucked in. I suffered more tears in empathy for all those living there at that moment, knowing what was in each heart! I anguished with relish. I may not forget this story. Ever.
Another great book of hers and one closer to home for me is "Coast Road."

Powerful Ending
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-05
This tearjerker will draw you in and make you feel connected to the characters. You'll need the Kleenex while reading this book!

beautiful tearjerker
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-17
I loved this book very much. The story was grabbing and intriguing and I felt drawn and connected to the characters. While the ending is very sad and I didn't understand why it happened was affected really deeply, even though it was just a book, I felt that it was a really powerful ending. I understand how many people could dislike the book because of this, but I enjoyed the book so much. Any book that can make me cry that much obviously is well written.

And I think it's not very cool that B. Allen told everyone reading the reviews the ending. It was one of the biggest plot turns, and what is the point of anyone reading it now? You should at least write SPOILER on it.

Also, this was my first Barbara Delinksy book, and it did NOT turn me away from her. I'd love to read more.

WARNING - Not for anyone pregnant, ill, or depressed.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-07
I must agree with B. Allen, I was very disappointed with the ending of this book. I would be very careful who I gave this book to. The ending is very sad (and might depress anyone, especially if they are pregnant or in the hospital). And not only sad, but I felt very cheated by it. I would like to think that if a "being of light" gave anyone three wishes, the outcome of those gifts from something so wonderful would turn out a lot better. But they were a rip off, and frankly, so is the book. Shame on you, Ms. Delinsky. You could have done a lot better with this book's premise.

What a disappointment
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-19
I went into this book wondering if the tragedies hinted at on the summary would be physical disabilities or something she would encounter after her accident. I was pleasantly surprised to find her doing so well and returning to a "normal" life. The interaction between her and Tom was really great and the descriptions of her near death experience were very interesting. Part of me had a feeling that this book would end in a bad way, but after she had the baby things seemed to be okay.

I was absolutely appalled to turn the page and read that she'd died - it was all I could do to finish it with the hope that somewhere it'd be a mistake and she'd come back. The book and not to mention my several days after reading it were ruined for me. I still can't get over this. It just feels like a cop out to end it that way - the wishes could have been worded better and it had the potential to be this really amazing uplifting story, but instead it failed miserably and I am still so bothered by the whole thing. I have 2 other Delinsky books that I am now avoiding because I can't take anything else of hers if I am going to feel this same way.

While I would give this 1 star to represent the anger and upset I am feeling towards this book, I only give it an additional star for the fact that the rest of the book was enjoyable.

Vermont
Promise Not to Tell: A Novel
Published in Paperback by Harper Paperbacks (2007-04-01)
Author: Jennifer Mcmahon
List price: $13.95
New price: $1.96
Used price: $1.48

Average review score:

Amazing
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-29
The author did a great job! I could not put it down. Each page gave a new clue so it keeps you hooked. I recommend this to everyone!!!

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-27
I just finished this little gem of a book and enjoyed it immensly. It has a little bit of everything and you will not be forgetting the main characters anytime soon...I highly recommend it!

A bit of a disppointment
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-27
I was actually extremely disappointed in this book. The beginning of the book was so incredibly engrossing with its description of Del and Kate's friendship and experiences. I loved the descprition of the farm house and the root cellar and all the the creepy little kid things that Kate experienced while being friends with Del.

However, I disliked Kate as a person because she lied about EVERYTHING. As a grown woman, she continued to lie all the time, lying that she and Del were even friends to protect herself from being involved with the murder. She lived with Del's murder hovering over her, knowing that she knew so many details about Del...her tattoo and what it might signify. I was so disappointed in her...I understand her lying as a 10 year old girl because she was scared, but as a grown 41 year old woman, it just made me so angry to read.

Some parts of this book were so wonderful. The last 30 pages or so, were just so infuriating.

It is a very quick read, it is suspensful at times, but the end is definitely a let down.

The Permanent Collection
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-17
Rather than reiterate the plot of this amazing mystery, this is why I recommend this book.
I was at the library looking for good reads and noticed
"Promise Not To Tell" set apart from the shelved books. I thought, I'll try.
Oh, what a marvelous book! I became so intrigued by Del, and the
myriad of characters in local Vermont color..........convinced that they were in part all real at some point in the author's life.

That is the gift of Jennifer McMahon's writing.

I will purchase this book new and it will become part of what I call my permanent collection. It was simply that exceptional.

Wonderful, Gripping, Page Turner
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-12
I absolutely loved this book! Jennifer McMahon has a true gift of mystery story-telling. I was enthralled with her back and forth (past to present to past) method of plot spacing...and truly the ghost aspects of the story, the unexplainable parts were absolutely believable! I've already passed this along to my sister and we're fast becoming fans! I've just started reading "Island of Lost Girls" and again, I am enthralled! Jennifer McMahan is a great discovery for those who love to read Jodi Picoult, Lesley Kagen and Elizabeth Flock novels.

Vermont
Stranger in the Kingdom
Published in Hardcover by Doubleday (1989-09-23)
Author: Howard Frank Mosher
List price: $18.95
New price: $11.78
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $50.00

Average review score:

Stranger in the Kingdom
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-23
Howard Frank Mosher did a great job of setting his book in New England. The characters were well rounded, the reader was given a lot of details on the area and the town was a small New England town. However with such great work on the back ground the book needed a little more umph. The book didnt actually start till about chapter 14. There was a lot of detail that the reader could have done without. Once it became a murder mystery in a small town it became quite good. It had a lot of twist and turns. People were betrayed and others learned the meaning of life. If you have a long weekend stuck in doors this is a great book. If you plan on a fast read think again.

Boring
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-22
This book was extremely boring to be honest with everyone who reads this review. It took FOREVER to pick up. It picked up after Chapter 14 which was basically TORTURE!! The trial though was great. The author did a well done job when he wrote the trial and all that. After that the book ended up drawing you in and you wanted to know more. The only thing is that it picked up in chapter 14 as I already said and there were only 21 chapters. But the little I enjoyed I loved. I believe most people would like this book due to the trial but they will suffer until they reach there. I think the author just wrote about a bunch of stuff that was irrelevant to us the readers. Prejudice though is one of the main topics of the book and it was greatly portrait and described by the author which I do give him 5 STARS on it. Just how he wrote about the racism I picture most of the New England states being racist back in the day and a little bit still today even though not to the point of killing. I name this novel a New England Novel because of the setting and the characters and the happenings. A+ on that Mosher, but sorry I will have to Give you a D+ for making me fall asleep!

New England Novel
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-22
I gave this book three stars because I found it was a dramatic tail taking place in a small upstate Vermont town. However the first half of the book seemed to drag and was spent on unnecessary character development. This is definetly a good book, just do your self a favor and start reading it from the middle.

Heller
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-26
I thought this book was a bit like getting on a roller coaster and taking the long slow clime and then suenlly you are set flying. For anyone who likes thrills such as a roller coaster I recomend this New England novel.

Mockingbird in New England
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-24
A very To Kill a Mockingbird-esque story about a small town in 1950s Vermont that is suddenly shaken by murder. The suspect is the town's new black preacher, Rev. Andrews. While traditionally pre-Civil War New England was a haven for escaped slaves, abolitionists, and of course advocates of freedom and equal rights (going all the way back to colonial America, which was New England), modern small New England towns, even today, tend to have a very minimal black population. Kingdom is no exception. So while most New Englanders pride themselves on their racial-tolerance and acceptance, it is very rarely tested.
Though be fore-warned it can be a slow-read.

Vermont
A Dangerous Woman
Published in Hardcover by Viking Adult (1991-01-23)
Author: Mary McGarry Morris
List price: $19.95
New price: $4.99
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

Brilliant.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-17
I cannot stop thinking about Martha Horgan, Morris' protagonist in this novel.

"A Dangerous Woman" is not only well-written, it's complex in a way that readers cannot quite figure out why they are both drawn to and repelled by Martha Horgan and the people whose lives are altered by her.

The story is gripping, the characters well developed, and Morris' novel touches on some important social issues. I loved this book, and look forward to reading more by this author. Hopefully, they will be as compelling.

Outstanding
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-01
A Dangerous Woman is a rich characterization of a woman in need of love, support, understanding, security and warmth. This novel is one of the most brilliant that I've read so far this year and it's now the tenth month. The extra-ordinary depth of it's author, Mary McGarry Morris in her understanding of the heroine is outstanding and she delivers her punches with passion and tenacity. We follow Martha through her ordeals, from teenage insecurity through to early thirties bewilderment. We grope blindly along, knowing that there is a tragedy coming and wishing that we could avert it, but it's impending doom is fate and Martha must face hers alone. While Martha can be annoying, gratingly stubborn and insensitive, most of the time she is written about in such a way that you just want to wrap her in your arms and protect her to save her from herself. The novel left me with the huge provocation of how we are in control of our destinies and how we affect those that witness our lives around us. I can't rate this novel high enough. It's compelling, absorbing and brilliantly written and can teach you things about yourself that you may not already know. A must read on anyone's list. I loved it!

You'll be annoyed, but keep going . . .
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-10
Within the first fifty pages or so, I was totally aggravated by Martha. She has suffered a traumatic childhood and adolescence, sure - but could she be any more annoying? It was easy to understand how the people around her react as they do, and why children still taunt her in the street now that she's a woman of thirty. It's as if there is some socially-deficient fog clouding her brain, making her honest to the point of incurring violence. She remains, to the end, an unlikable character.

That, however, is part of what makes her story a fascinating read. I resisted the urge to toss this book aside in favor of the Ramsey Campbell paperback sitting on my nightstand, and by the hundredth page I was still annoyed by Martha - but I had to know what would become of her. From the opening paragraph, we know that she's going to kill someone . . . but who? and why? and will she lose her painful sense of honesty?

Morris does a fine job of getting the reader inside Martha's head, (much in the same way that Mr. Campbell does), though very unobtrusively. It was only toward the end of the book that I found myself, while still disliking Martha, at least understanding her. I even felt a passing moment of triumph when she held to her grating sense of truth in the final pages.

This is not one of those books I would keep on my shelf for future re-readings - I honestly couldn't bear Martha for another 300 pages - but it makes me wish I hadn't sold Ms. Morris' VANISHED to the used book-store without ever reading it.

Leaves a Lasting Mark
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-11
Compelling and heartbreaking, Morris weaves a haunting tale of a lonely young woman's losing battle to gain social acceptance, love, respect, and a healthy life of her own. Alienated and ridiculed by her small community, the origins of what make Martha Horgan so strange and different from those around her are unknown. The "dangerous" qualities referred to in the title put off those around her and ultimately lead to her undoing: her belief that the truth must always be known, under all cirumstances, her inability to function around others in society, her tempermental outbursts, and her undying fixations on people. Martha is richly drawn in three-dimensions as a character both frustrating and sympathetic, unlikable yet lovable, exasperating yet endearing, and ultimately, all too human. Morris does a superb job of painting those inhabit Martha's world as equally complex and contradictive, particuarly Frances and Mac. These two judge Martha for her abnormalities, yet their own distorted belief systems and foilables are all too abundent, and their own behavior quite questionable at times. In many ways, they see reflected in Martha the qualities they fear the most about themselves. Morris does an elegent job of depicting the culture of their community and the adverse reactions of "normal" society to those who are different. I liked that Martha's mental illness remained undefined....it was an interesting way of highlighting that people are afraid of what they can't label, not all diverse people can be placed in a tight category, and it raised questions of whether or not the base of the problem was biological or the result of her life experience. Overall, a worthy read: thought-provoking and well-written, sensitive yet brutal, yet not a difficult or lenghty read by any means.

Captivating Story - couldn't put it down
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-14
I couldn't put it down, I was so enormously enthralled by the lives of these people! This was an amazing character sketch of an entire town and their denial of the truth and how that changed everything.
Martha is a sad creature who needed someone to believe her, love her and show patience with her. Perhaps she came close - but, not until it was too late.
Maybe this book will make you lean over your neighbor's fence and say hello. Maybe it will help you open your heart to someone you don't understand.
I always rate books and movies in my mind by this question, "Am I a better person for having read this book or seen this movie?" The answer in this case is YES!


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