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E**E
Brilliant Book!
WOW what another amazing book by this wonderful Author! This is the third one i have read and will definately be reading more! You just felt you were there ! Just brilliant!
S**E
Old version of paperback?
Book in OK condition. I would estimate probably a cheap version of original, based upon quality of paper & print. As I'm currently reading it it is good enough. As ever the story draws you in with great detail. I save all books by this author for guests to share when visiting.
C**E
wonderful writer, wonderful book
This is a superb book: well written, fully developed characters, and a personal mystery at the heart of it. It also has one of the best heroes of modern fiction. Kingsolver is a brilliant writer, and this is possibly her best book.
M**D
It is deep, but it is also very easy to read.
Much lighter reading than I expected, and it was so good to read something real.
S**Y
Best book I've read for years!
An unusual, absorbing tale written with great attention to detail which takes the reader through swathes of time and landscape.
C**H
overly long
Finished at long last. Not one of her best books. Rather a muddled and overly long book without a very comprehensible story!
D**G
Excellent
Barbara Kingsolver is one of my favourite authors. She can do no wrong.
M**Y
Gopod stuff!
The excellent writing and imagination one expects from Barbara Kingsolver.
G**0
Great
This is simply one of the best books I have ever read
A**R
This book was oozing with feminine energy and beauty. ...
This book was oozing with feminine energy and beauty. At times heart wrenching, at times heart lifting. The descriptive use of words placed me right there in the settings which she so lovingly described. My introduction to Barbara Kingsolver and now I'm on my way to reading other works by her.
A**L
Angieville: ANIMAL DREAMS
I'm a sucker for reading other people's favorite books of all time. When someone tells me a certain book is one of the books of their life, I get this pressing urge to run out and secure a copy. It generally doesn't matter what genre or style of book it is. I think this is mostly because I know what it means to care so much about a book you have to have it nearby at all times. Maybe you own more than one copy so that if you lend one out you've still got a spare...just in case. Maybe you can't remember a time when you hadn't read and loved that book, those characters. I know what that feels like. And because I have such tender feelings for certain books, I want to have read the books others feel the same way about. It's almost always a rewarding experience. One of the most memorable of these times happened several years ago when a good friend of mine on Readerville was talking about what a superb novel Barbara Kingsolver's ANIMAL DREAMS was. I had read one Kingsolver book at that point-- The Bean Trees: A Novel --and, while I appreciated parts of it, my overall reaction was pretty lackluster. So it wasn't with a lot of excitement that I approached Kingsolver's second novel.Codi Noline thought she'd left Grace, Arizona once and for all when she and her little sister Hallie escaped and went away to college. It's been ten years since then and Codi and Hallie have traveled farther than she ever expected. Even after medical school and several stints as a world traveler, she's never found a place she could call home And yet, when the call comes in that her father has Alzheimer's and can't live alone anymore and Codi returns home to look after him, she finds to her chagrin that she hasn't moved that far beyond her childhood after all. Back in Grace, she stays in her old friend Emelina's guest house and takes a job teaching biology at the local high school. With her platinum blonde hair and her checkered history with this town, she stands out like a sore thumb and she's all but sure it was a colossal mistake coming home this way. But as she exchanges letters with Hallie, deals with her deteriorating father, and strikes up a tentative friendship with Loyd Peregrina--an Apache railroad brakeman she once knew--Codi's perspective is challenged on so many levels and the lines between memory and truth and past and present are blurred so far it's all she can do to hang on to the here and now.Here are the opening lines from Codi's perspective:"I am the sister who didn't go to war. I can only tell you my side of the story. Hallie is the one who went south, with her pickup truck and her crop-disease books and her heart dead set on a new world.Who knows why people do what they do? I stood on a battleground once too, but it was forty years after the fighting was all over: northern France, in 1982, in a field where the farmers' plow blades kept turning up the skeletons of cows. They were the first casualties of the German occupation. In the sudden quiet after the evacuation the cows had died by the thousands in those pastures, slowly, lowing with pain from unmilked udders. But now the farmers who grew sugar beets in those fields were blessed, they said, by the bones. The soil was rich in calcium."I knew right away I liked Codi. I felt sorry for her and I wanted to know her better. By the end, I liked her even more, as though I understood her because I had followed her home. Kingsolver's storytelling is breathlessly evocative. I constantly found myself gasping at the way she wields the written word to move her readers and wrap them up in a vision of the world the way it is and the way it could be. Halfway through my first read, I couldn't take it any longer. I quietly returned my library copy and fled to the bookstore to buy one of my own. I had to own this book and I wasn't even finished yet! Truthfully, ANIMAL DREAMS took me completely by surprise. It had me by the throat with its motherless sisters who want to save the world, its handmade peacock pinatas, its dying town, and its gorgeous, gorgeous longing. The story of a girl searching to belong, of a town struggling to survive, and the intricate myths and culture surrounding them all completely engulfed me. To say nothing of the quiet, intense love story winding its way through the beautiful prose. There were so many other passages I wanted to quote for you but in the end I couldn't take away that opportunity of discovering them for yourself. It's just too special to intrude on in that way. When I think of those few perfect books, this one always comes to mind. I'm so glad Zanna sang its praises so emphatically. I'm so glad I listened. Because it's one of the books of my life now, too. I like having it nearby at all times. I have a lending copy...just in case. And I have trouble remembering a time I didn't know and love Codi, Loyd, and all of Grace. The Bean Trees: A Novel
S**Q
Meandering
I am rereading Kingsolver's books. This one seems to meander more than necessary, but I really like the story. The metaphors are very creative, but the story gets lost at times. Kingsolver is very bright and makes many interesting connections.đ
V**A
Déception
Trop farfelu. Pas de suite dans les idĂ©es, un lien ver sans profondeur. Je ne retrouve pas l'auteur de Poisonwood Bible ni un autre sur la femme isolĂ©e dans la forĂȘt.
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