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Reacher is the ManReview Date: 2008-09-02
Well Written & EnthrallingReview Date: 2008-07-04
First time I have read Child...Review Date: 2008-05-15
What a great story...suspenseful, technically intriguing with interesting characters! Jack Reacher is the mysterious hero, with savvy and smarts, defying all stereotypes. The plot builds slowly until about 3 quarters through, then the mystery resolves, but the action and suspense intensifies. At the end, the villains' motives and the time they have to do all this may be a bit of a stretch, but still plausible. A great read and look forward to reading more of Child's stories.
How do you keep the most powerful people in the world alive? Review Date: 2008-08-03
Child does a masterful job at taking us into the secret service and the issues, concerns, and challenges faced by an agency with an impossible task. A task they perform day in and day out successfully. After reading this novel, you will have a greater appreciation for just how successful the real secret service is.
While the premise alone is enough to carry this face paced novel forward, the exploration of Reacher's character provides a compelling depth to this novel. At times Reacher seems almost super human with his confidence and ability to anticipate exactly what the bad guys might do. But it is his relationship with M.E. Froelich, a secret service agent whose previous romantic involvement with Reacher's dead brother, provides the ever so subtle glimpses into his otherwise stoic persona.
WIHTOUT FAIL is a wonderful thriller that will keep you reading well into the night.
Todd A Fonseca author of The Time Cavern(www.thetimecavern.com)
Routine Reacher offeringReview Date: 2008-06-29
I've been reading this series in order, and along with Running Blind, this is probably the weakest entry. The first one, Killing Floor, is still the best, and Echo Burning was also very good.

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The return of the ThreadReview Date: 2008-05-24
As DRAGONSEYE opens it has been two hundred years since Thread had last fallen on Pern, the colonists had prospered, the population had grown, Pernese culture and society had become established and the dragons had increased in both size and number in anticipation of the upcoming Threadfall. Unfortunately there were also problems, much of the remaining technology from the original settlers had either broken down or was in danger of doing so soon. With each passing generation more was lost of both the advanced machinery, materials and the knowledge needed to preserve them. Pern was entering a Dark Age and desperately needed to adapt to these new circumstances even if that meant abandoning the past.
DRAGONSEYE covers various subplots, including a young journeyman painter who sees both the best and worst that Pernese society has to offer. Also we are shown much about the workings of Pernese government, and life inside a Weyr. Overshadowing everything is the steady approach of Pern's own special enemy, the Red Star with it's accompanying fall of Thread.
As always with series books in general those who are fans will anxiously await the next installment to discover what has happened next. The Pern series is no exception to this even though many of the books skip forward many generations resulting in entirely new casts of characters. McCaffrey manages to tread the fine line of making each novel more or less independent of the previous book and so enabling the reader to read them in any order, without endlessly rehashing old material for the benefit of new readers and the boredom of fans. One bit of recycling that does occur though is that certain incidents seem to reappear in different novels, sometimes to the point of making the reader wonder if they hadn't read this particular book before. This may just be a case of a writer repeating herself over the course of a long series or of making the point that those who do not know their history are doomed to repeat it.
Overall though, this is an excellent entry into a wonderful series, one that has this reader on the lookout for the next installment, or an earlier one that has been missed.
DragonseyeReview Date: 2007-10-02
My favoriteReview Date: 2007-07-11
Great if you like Sci FictionReview Date: 2007-05-13
DragonseyeReview Date: 2007-01-22

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Flat CharactersReview Date: 2008-06-01
Great..... Review Date: 2008-05-29
Fern Michaels is a pseudonymReview Date: 2003-09-26
CelebrationReview Date: 2001-06-23
Too long, unbelievable, but at least entertainingReview Date: 2001-04-20


SanctuaryReview Date: 2008-10-05
Nora Roberts at her best!Review Date: 2008-02-14
great read!Review Date: 2007-08-10
The formula is getting old...Review Date: 2007-07-27
It seems as if Roberts is trying to write for the broadest market possible; she is losing me as a fan in the process.
Sanctuary???Review Date: 2007-08-06
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A Missed OpportunityReview Date: 2008-08-16
Transcends genresReview Date: 2008-08-05
Lee is a fine writer. I look forward to reading more of him.
Hum Drum and Ho HumReview Date: 2008-07-27
You know right from the beginning the books is going to be boring when the protagonist, a Korean-American male, meets up with a Caucasian female at a cocktail party, and when they sneak off to kiss they both can't get into it because of the racial difference. Come on! If you're not turned on by someone, don't try putting out.
Forget the kiss, forget the minor and major poignancies, forget this book. Read something truly exciting and multi-cultural, like "Tailor of Panama" by John le Carre. There's a plot that moves.
A Novel of Immigrant ExperienceReview Date: 2007-12-17
Henry, the prototypical outsider, works as a spy for a private investigative agency whose clients or missions are never fully defined in the novel. Henry seems to get over-involved with the people whose lives he infiltrates. He became close to a Phillipino psychiatrist who offered Henry, through friendship and therapy, insights into Henry's life. But most of the novel involves Henry's relationship with another individual on whom he spies: a Korean New York City politician named John Kwang who has aspirations to run for mayor.
The book describes the life of Korean immigrants and the difficult culture shock of living in a new land. Lee also describes well the vibrant and continuously varied life of New York City, with its diversity, as seen by his protagonist. I thought the overriding metaphor of the book, the immigrant as outsider and spy, was pat and unconvincing. It was too deriviative of Elison's "Invisible Man" and Lee never convincingly explains how Henry becomes a spy or why his experience as a spy should, somehow, be regarded as representative of the Korean immigrant experience. The book includes some lovely lyrically written passages, some perceptive scenes (those involving the psychiatrist, for example) and some chilling scenes of the modus operandi of the spying operation. But much of this novel is padded and written in a routine prose. I frequently grew impatient with it.
The book aptly describes the travails of immigrants new to the United States, particularly those from Korea. But the immigrant experience has, in general, been described more convincingly in many other novels. In some ways the book seemed to me a not fully successful amalgamation of Ellison's "Invisible Man" as it described the African-American experience and Henry Roth's "Call it Sleep" as itlyrically described the early Jewish immigrant experience through the eyes of a young boy.
Henry Park has a torn, ambivalent attitude towards the United States based upon the difficulties of his life. What stayed with me in the book was the speaker's love for this country, frequently expressed lyrically. For example:
"Americans, one of them would say, are a wonderful and exuberant people. They dance, they play-fight, they puff up their lips and blow out their chests. they enjoy using their hands. They seem to live always at a football match". p. 340
"Still I love it here. I love these streets lined with big American sedans and livery cars and vans. I love the early morning storefronts opening up one by one, shopkeepers talking as they crank their awnings down. ... I follow the strolling Saturday families of brightly wrapped Hindus and then the black-clad Hasidim, and step into all the old churches that were once German and then Korean and are now Vietnamese. And I love the brief Queens sunlight at the end of the day, the warm lamp always reaching though the westward tops of that magnificent city." p.346
"Native Speaker" is a good book. It takes a hard look at the difficulties young Asians may face in the United States. The most moving and compelling part of the story remains, for me, the hope and love it expresses for our country and its promise.
Robin Friedman
Auspicious Literary Debut by a Great American Writer of FictionReview Date: 2006-12-10
Chang Rae Lee uses the metaphor of espionage to explore the emotional and intellectual complexity of his protagonist Henry Park. We meet Park as he is struggling to cope with his dissolving marriage to an attractive young White American woman, and his rather stoic reaction to the recent unexpected, tragic death of their young son. He finds solace by undertaking undercover work on behalf of a shadowy organization, infiltrating the staff of a popular Korean-American New York City councilman from Queens. Soon he finds himself completely immersed in the politician's corrupt, almost Byzantine, political universe, becoming an active participant in the politician's relationship with his Korean-American community. Lee accomplishes his admirable literary feat of fine writing with a crisp ear for dialogue and splendid, almost lyrical, prose, creating compelling characters like Henry Park and his estranged wife.
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Ambition that delivers. Wow.Review Date: 2008-11-17
I ding it one star for not being the best narrative ever. There are plenty of terrific engrossing dramas and character studies out there and this book doesn't come close. But if you crave that hard science fiction "sense of wonder" this is truly as good as it gets. Go.
Worth reading despite some major problemsReview Date: 2008-08-18
This novel has all the elements that make for truly brilliant sci-fi, and indeed many feel that this is Bear's masterpiece, but somehow it leaves this reviewer a trifle flat. First of all, the entire first half of the book is just setup, getting us to understand the political and economic situation on Mars and introducing us to the character of our protagonists. In a novel that is clearly a little longer than necessary, the student uprising could have been compressed considerably, and the long courtship could have been a fraction of its actual length. In the second half of the book, Casseia emerges as an almost-mythic figure who never chooses the easy path, even when we find ourselves wishing she would, and this makes her seem unrealistic, or at least unsympathetic. Yes, the first half is supposed to personalize her and make her seem more human, but in the eyes of this reviewer, this long paean to failed relationships serves mainly to discredit her personally. The supporting cast is exclusively flat, stiff, and one-dimensional, and most only appear in a short section of the book.
There are other problems as well. The Quantum Logic concept, which is so critically important to the story, completely lacks credibility. And most of the major plot points are telegraphed well ahead of time - some of them as early as the title. The one real surprise Bear offers only works because the reader has been lulled into a complacent stupor by the time it actually hits.
Once things start happening, though, the second half is a pretty powerful read, and not all fun and games, either (i.e., the mangling of a major character during an attack). This is a story of a woman who sacrificed much for her planet - a personal story, even a love story, as much as a political story. As such, it may be better received by female readers than their male counterparts. Still, this book is worth a read despite its weaknesses.
The title says it all...Review Date: 2007-11-11
great story inspite of slow startReview Date: 2007-09-29
Coming of Age on MarsReview Date: 2008-09-09
Mars has a creaking political structure. Initially, the settlers had formed Binding Multiples based on the Lunar model. These family-based syndicates owned land, businesses and other resources. Later, the BMs divided Mars into districts run by governors.
In 2171, the governors and the largest BMs accepted a temporary Statist constitution unifying Mars. Freechild Dauble became the President during this trial period. Caroline Connor -- an old friend of Dauble -- was appointed chancellor of the University of Mars at Sinai.
The vote on final acceptance of the new constitution was coming up soon and the Statists feared incidents. So the UMS administration voided the contracts of students suspected of Goback sympathies. They were evicted from their dorms and herded to the train station.
In this novel, Casseia of the Majumdar BM is one of the students voided out of UMS. When her friend Diane goes with other students in protest of the expulsion, Cassie follows her away from the station.
Sean Dickinson and Gretyl Laughton are older students who soon become the leaders of the protest movement. They lead the students to an older section of the UMS campus inhabited only by maintenance robots. There they work out plans for the protest and also include efforts to sabotage UMS communications. Cassie is soon infatuated with Sean.
Charles Franklin is a physicist major at UMS who is attracted to Cassie during the protest. Of course, she is more interested in Sean, but does notice Charles now and then. When the detained students are liberated by Goback forces, Cassie goes back to her family and almost forgets Charles.
Achmed Crown Niger represents the UMS administration in interrogations of the detained students. Later, he returns from exile on Earth to become head of the Cailetet BM. He maintains his contacts with Earth and is often at odds with the other Martian BMs.
In this story, the Statist constitution is rejected and Statist leaders are evicted from Mars. The student protest was futile and foolish. UMS is soon reopened to the voided students.
Instead of returning to UMS, Cassie goes to UM at Durrey Station. There she encounters Charles once again and becames his lover. He is her first lover and seems very considerate.
Cassie learns a little about the Bell Continuum from Charles. He has dedicated his life to studying this obscure subject. Then he asks Cassie to lawbond with him. Although Cassie believes that she loves him, she denies his proposal and the two separate once more.
Cassie decides that she wants to study politics. Mars has a dearth of politicians and almost no experience in the political processes. She eventually wins a position as an apprentice to her third uncle and goes to Earth with him as an envoy of the Martian BMs.
This tale takes Cassie through the eventual unification of Mars. She meets Charles again, becomes involved in his research, and gains the highest political position on the planet. Enjoy!
Recommended for Bear fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of interplanetary colonies, political machinations, and true romance.
-Arthur W. Jordin

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Good ReadReview Date: 2008-11-01
Purity in DeathReview Date: 2008-10-12
You can't go wrong with J.D. Robb. She writes a great futuristic detective fiction. I am going to read them all again; and there is a big list.
Purity in Death By J.D.RobbReview Date: 2008-01-07
It follows the life of a Woman Dective, her up's and downs and
every thing in between.
One of the best in the series so far!!!Review Date: 2007-03-22
Those are some SPOOKY WORDS!!!
What Nora Roberts achieves in this book is Absolute SUSPENSE! I defy anyone to read this book and not be thrilled. It grabs hold of you and will not let go! I absolutely do not know what to say. I'm already two books past this one, and neither of them have risen to the mark that this one hits. The action is gripping. You will laugh, you WILL cringe.
Not the most frightning book I've ever read, but I did momentarily contemplate unplugging my computer.
The best series ever!Review Date: 2006-11-04

A compelling eye-openerReview Date: 2007-09-10
Amazing Grace: Lives of Children and the Conscience of a Nation, The Review Date: 2007-05-07
An important bookReview Date: 2007-06-25
Its incredible how close Jonathan Kozol manages to come to these kids. They really take him in and open up their hearts. They share with him their stories. These stories are full of horrible and painful things that are so far from the realities that we experience here in modern day big city Stockholm. The segregation in these South Bronx neighborhoods is total, whether it's the schools, hospitals, or prisons. And almost always the kids receive the short end of the stick. Children tell of how they see murders on the street, get attacked by rats, how some are killed or burned from household fires, how some eat cold oatmeal out of the box for dinner, many of the kids live with chronic asthma due to anxiety, others live with mothers dying of AIDS, and often have classrooms that are decrepit and completely rundown. There are less qualified doctors and teachers here than anywhere else in the state of New York. There have been major tax cuts in the city that have hit these citizens hardest. Like cuts in sanitation that has resulted in mountains of garbage lining up inside buildings drawing hordes of rats. Cuts in maintenance of buildings that leave elevators broken, often resulting in playing kids falling down the elevator shafts and dying. The police refer to some of the housing projects to as "death camps" because so many drug dealers and addicts dominate them. The tax cuts have also led to many social workers losing their jobs as well as closing of several youth centers that allow kids safe places to be while their parents work. Prostitution is also common among the women. Mostly serving the truck drivers who drive through the neighborhood to deliver goods to the Hunts Point market that is close. They turn tricks for 3 to 5 dollars that go to feeding their addictions. This happens all hours of the day and night, even when the children can see. Many times when the children or adults are asked how they manage to survive they mention their faith in god and heaven. That the place that they are in now is more reminiscent of hell, but this is not where they will end up.
As a atudent of theology I cannot help but see this book as a strong wake up call. The gospels of the New Testament took the part of the poor, saying the last shall be first and the first shall be last. In the Christian nation of America that prints "In god we trust" on their coins-this is how they treat the poor. One priest who works in the South Bronx took a little kid with him when he had to drive to Queens to do some errands. There he took him to Burger King to eat. The kid had never been outside of the Bronx before. The priest later learned from the kid's teacher that he wrote an essay in school about their lunch called "My trip to Burger King"-the same way a rich kid might write about a trip he made to Florida. Most of these kids never get any Christmas or birthday presents. They don't even have their own rooms. Sleeping on sofas or on mattresses on the floor. One child says, " it feels like I'm hidden", and this is a good observation. Nobody wants to be reminded of what these children are going through. Therefore their stories are seldom, if ever, heard. This is why Jonathan Kozols book is so important. Only a short distance away just across 96th street lies the park avenue apartments that houses some of the wealthiest people in the nation, households with an average income of 300,000 dollars a year. Toward the end of the book the author talks to an old poet living in the Bronx and the start to discuss the Nazi holocaust and the concentration camps. How there are certain disturbing parallels to what happened then and whats happening now. How the outcasts and those human beings viewed as being "superfluous" are quarantined. "Its not the same" he says, "but there are some similarities. There is the feeling of eclipse. There is the likelihood of death for many. There is a sense of people watching from the outside but seeming paralyzed and doing nothing. And then there are the miracles."
Forgotten Children in the South BronxReview Date: 2007-01-04
The book is basically a series of conversations, with Kozol playing the unbiased questioner, who lets his characters, excuse me, interviewees, write his book for him. Very rarely is his voice heard; he only allows some sadness, and some delight, filter through. Statements are made, facts are reported, but one must keep referring to the Notes at the back of the book to substantiate the facts, and check the dates, because we just never can be sure what has been resequenced. It would almost have been more efficient to include the notes in the body of the book, so one does not have to continually flip back and forth from the text to the notes.
The children in the book are lovely, and it is their amazing grace shining through the constant sorrow that gives this book its title. Although it is true that we are all equal, in truth we are all different, and Mr. Kozol's skin color, clothing, speech and demeanor mark him as a stranger in this strange land called the Bronx. (The villain of the piece is actually New York's master builder, Robert Moses, who cut a deep swathe, the "Cross Bronx Expressway," through the heart of the neighborhood and created a slum where there had once been a thriving community.) And because Mr. Kozol is a foreigner, indeed he wears the skin and clothing of The Powers That Be, one must wonder if his conversations with the children and parents are indicative of their true feelings, or are they just telling him what they think he wants to hear?
Mothers and grandmothers are the true heroes of the piece; guiding their precious children (including one, here called, "Precious," although who knows if that name has been changed) through a drug- and crime-infested hell, while fathers, sons and daughters bounce from hospitals to prisons to the cemetery. HIV-infection is a very real force here, although since the book is now 12 years old I do not know what effect the disease has on the community today.
The book's structure is flawed, but the story is inspiring, and makes the reader question how the children can be saved. Is it the obligation of the City government, which seems to have done a fine job relocating its "problem children" from their visibility in homeless shelters in Manhattan to the far, far away, out-of-sight, out-of-mind Bronx? Is it to be solved by mentoring, one-on-one, as 13-year-old "Anthony" is guided in his education by an older gentleman, a writer and poet? Should Kozol have just picked up Precious and adopted her into his Massachusetts family life, thus rescuing her from her certain tragic fate?
And those of us who are teachers, what is our role? Kozol seems to leave us in despair, as if there is nothing that a human being can do to turn this tide. We have to hope that the influence of an inspired teacher could make a dent in the defenses that these children have built up, like a shield, to guard them from the hard knocks of their hard lives. Maybe a teacher can, because if we didn't believe that such a thing was possible, we might as well turn in our chalk and go home.
Out of Sight, Out of MindReview Date: 2007-08-20
Kozol focuses on the South Bronx ghetto of Mott Haven, the poorest borough in New York, clearly segregated from the middle and upper classes, where two-thirds of the population are Hispanic and one-third African-American. Through interviews with school children, teachers, ministers, and community members, Kozol paints a bleak picture of the equally bleak lives led by those who live in this area. He recounts stories of buildings where wires have been eaten through by rats that are the size of squirrels, of drugs being bought and sold openly on the streets (although the drug dealers have enough respect to break when school lets out), and of families too numerous to count who are being killed off one by one by AIDS. The way these children see the world is frightenly dead-on; they know when they're not wanted because it's proven to them everyday in the way they have to live.
"Amazing Grace" is not an easy read due to its topic matter. Kozol's style is matter-of-fact, made up of usually uninterrupted comments by those he's interviewed, sometimes with his questions thrown in, and his own comments and hypotheses as to how this can go on. But Kozol doesn't necessarily have answers or even blame. Surely, some blame has to go to a system that keeps the poorest people with the least chance for success segregated from others, a separation of the haves and have nots to the greatest degree. And certainly others would place the blame on the poor people themselves. Perhaps it's a combination of a lot of factors, not one or the other, but what is certain is that too little is being done (or maybe can be done) to make a difference before it is too late.

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Quite a downerReview Date: 2008-07-17
A Memorable ClanReview Date: 2008-07-04
For more than two hundred years the MacDonalds have made their livings with their hands and their backs, working as farmers, lumberjacks, lighthouse caretakers, and uranium miners, never afraid to take on the toughest or most dangerous jobs available to them. But no matter how difficult life at times got for some of them, the family always took care of its own and none of them ever forgot that they were part of the MacDonald clan. Their family loyalty was a fierce one and it was never questioned.
No Great Mischief is largely told in flashback form by its narrator, Alexander MacDonald, a successful orthodontist who as the book begins is in Toronto checking on his alcoholic brother, Calum, who seems to be slowly drinking himself to death. Alexander's visits to Toronto involve sharing old memories with his brother and leaving a little cash and alcohol behind to help Calum make it through the rest of his week. How Calum has reached his dreadful condition is a long, sad story but it is only one part of the MacDonald family saga.
No Great Mischief is a combination of historical fiction and family saga and it is a bit unusual in the sense that it focuses only on the MacDonalds who originally came to Canada and on those living there at the moment, with very little being told of the generations connecting them. But what a story it is because Alistair MacLeod has filled it with characters and incidents that will be long remembered by his readers.
The present day MacDonalds are held together by the narrator's grandparents, two grandfathers and a grandmother, three people who despite their differences share a deep and loving respect for each other. The grandfathers could hardly be more different, one being an earthy man who loves his beer and his wife, the other living alone with his books and historical research. It is these three who get the next two generations of MacDonalds through the tragedy of sudden death that comes their way over the decades.
The MacDonalds are not a family that will be easily forgotten but the highlight of the book is perhaps MacLeod's vivid recreation of life in the uranium mining camps of the 1960s. That unique, dangerous and insulated little world was a revelation to me, one of those places I am happy to have visited in a book and missed in the real world.
But for one flaw, I would have rated this book higher than the 4.0 rating I settled on - some of the long conversations between the narrator and his twin sister have a staged quality to them. They are packed with so much historical detail, and read more as recitation than conversation, that the reader cannot help but feel a distracting switch in tone. Luckily, this does not happen often and can be easily enough overlooked.
Perhaps the best written book I've ever readReview Date: 2007-08-10
For me, the book that starts out confusing--why the characters are doing what they are today? and ends with a deep comprehension of bonds that form during a life.
This is definitely not a book for someone wanting a breezy travelogue about the pretty vacationland on Canada's East Coast. MacLeod's novel has nothing to do with the tourist experience. Instead, it is about a harsh and demanding land that shapes the characters and their relationships much as the waves carve the shore.
I'm not from Cape Breton, although I have been there 9 times and grown to love the place. The locals see MacLeod's writing as being very true to their heritage, and treasure it. His stories are often dark and quite sad. In particular his short stories (see "The Island") often leave me in tears.
This is the story of some lives, tough lives in remarkable places from Cape Breton to western Canadian mines. In the end, if you are like me (and several of my friends), you will understand the brothers' bond, and applaud the extraordinary skill and beauty with which the author has told this story.
I love this bookReview Date: 2007-10-30
After college, the boy twin, one of many Alexanders in the family, join the brothers in the mines one summer, basically out of guilt for never having shared their rough lives. Tragedy ensues and the oldest brother, the leader of the clan, ends up in jail.
Yes, there is a lot of stuff about Scottish history here and a family that seems doomed to repeat the tragedies of the past, a theme not congenial to my American students who want to think they are in charge of their own destiny. But as we read, we see that the oldest brother Calum is an old-fashioned tragic hero. Self-reliant and resourceful to a fault, the kind of guy you would want at your side to get out alive of Iraq, he is ultimately brought down by his refusal to live by the codes of modern polite society. The triumph of this novel is that by the end the reader has come to care deeply for a character who in real life most of us would probably cross the street to avoid. I truly felt enlarged by this novel and its generous and noble vision of some people who haven't quite caught up with the modern world. Beautifully written too.
McLeod does it again.Review Date: 2007-08-22
Weaving the past and the present, No Great Mischief is a tale of family. There are three plot lines in this intricate, yet highly readable novel. In current day, Alexander MacDonald is a successful orthodontist who often has trouble with why people pay him so much to make them pretty. He is trying to care for his oldest brother, Calum, a dying alcoholic who fascinates and repels him.
The second plot line is about Alexander's childhood. Taking place in Cape Breton, Alexander and his twin sister are raised by their paternal grandparents when their parents and one of their older brothers, Colin, falls through the ice as they make their way from the Cape to the lighthouse island where they live. Their three older brothers, now on their own, become loggers and miners in places around the world. They always go together and work side-by-side until one of them is sent to jail for murder.
And the predominate, yet most subtle, plot line is the coming of the MacDonalds to Canada. From the Scottish Highlands, the Calum Rudah (the red-haired clan) weathers a nasty and ill-fated trip across the ocean.
The story is almost, but miraculously not, confusing as different generations of MacDonalds are named "Alexander." However, that is one of the strengths of MacLeod's writing. It has the ability to weave in and out and flash back and forth, all the while never losing the reader.
At the heart of this novel, is family and loyalty. When the Calum Rudah leave Scotland, they try to leave their dog behind, but the dogs swims behind them until they can no longer risk her drowning and pull her into the boat. That image ignites the heart of the novel, as one of the dog's descendants waits for Alexander's parents to return to the lighthouse island in a show of loyalty.
Armchair Interview says: A 5-star offering from Alistair MacLeod.
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Nice way to pass the time.Review Date: 2008-04-15
Last half of book makes up for first halfReview Date: 2008-02-19
amber beachReview Date: 2007-01-05
[Review and Reflections] Amber Beach - an excellent tale of Amber, the Stone of Fire!!Review Date: 2005-09-16
No crumbs along the way?Review Date: 2006-01-12
But what bugged me most was the childish style of the novel and the way it wrapped up in about 5 pages at the end after a rather tedious journey thrugh fishing details. Ugh. The Amber aspect was enough to pique one's imagination, and that's about where the interest stopped for me. The heroine is of course tough yet tender, cliched ever-so-talented gal artist in a wealthy family of strong cliched men.
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