Average customer rating:
- Intriguing beginning, disappointing end
- A page-turner that doesn't live up to its promise.
- A wonderful way to discover Barbara Vine
- Just a Phase?
- A Crowning Achievement for Barbara Vine (or Ruth Rendell)
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The Chimney Sweeper's Boy: A Novel (Random House Large Print)
Barbara Vine
Manufacturer: Random House Large Print
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The Blood Doctor: A Novel
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Grasshopper
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Brimstone Wedding, the
ASIN: 0375702938
Release Date: 1998-05-26 |
Amazon.com
Writing as Ruth Rendell, Barbara Vine has earned the Grand Master Award for lifetime achievement. In The Chimney Sweeper's Boy, Vine proves herself the equal of her alter ego and a master of the psychological thriller--as well as the police procedural--in this riveting novel. Why bestselling novelist Gerald Candless assumed a new identity years before his marriage and the birth of his two daughters isn't revealed until the penultimate chapter of the book, but the effect of his deception on his family drives Vine's deft character studies. In Gerald's wife, Ursula, and his daughters, Hope and Sarah, Vine has created three complex women in the thrall of an equally complicated and compelling man. As Sarah unravels the mystery of her father's deception, Gerald gradually becomes a more sympathetic figure. But Ursula, whose strange marital bargain with Gerald and whose distant relationship with her daughters tug at the heart, stays with the reader long after this distinguished, literary mystery is finished. --Jane Adams
Book Description
An unforgettable tale of mystery and obsession by Barbara Vine (pseudonym of Ruth Rendell, winner of the Mystery Writers of America Grand Master Award for lifetime achievement)
This is the utterly absorbing story of best-selling novelist Gerald Candless, whose sudden death from a heart attack leaves behind a wife and two doting daughters. To sort through her grief, one of his daughters, Sarah, decides to write a biography of her internationally celebrated father.
Within hours of beginning her research, Sarah comes across the first of what will be many shocking revelations. As her life is slowly torn apart, a terrible logic finally emerges to explain her mother's remoteness, her father's need to continually reinvent himself in his work, and a long-forgotten London murder.
From the Hardcover edition.
Customer Reviews:
Intriguing beginning, disappointing end.......2007-06-13
I love Barbara Vine. I think she is one of the most thought-provoking and edgy writers of our times. "A Fatal Inversion" is one of my favorite books, and a perfect example of a surprise-ending novel. But this title, "The Chimney Sweeper's Boy," fails to live up to the author's normally high standards.
This is the story of a man who was idolized by his daughters and resented by his wife who has been hiding a whole other side to his personality rarely glimsed by his inner circle. The journey that his daughter and others take in discovering this secret person is fascinating and well-crafted.
Unfortunately, the ultimate revelation of his deep, dark secret is disappointing, out-of-date, and predictable. Read this for the deft and incisive writing of Ms Vine, but do not hope for a stunning revelation at the end. This one will disappoint.
A page-turner that doesn't live up to its promise........2007-03-04
Yes, as the reviewer from Richmond, Virginia has mentioned, the book doesn't live up to its promise. But the sharp character studies, most especially Ursula, the wronged wife, are remarkable. I also enjoyed the titillating sexual love affair between Sarah and her sadistic boy-toy. By the end, however, I was terribly disappointed; I felt the book came to an abrupt halt, as if the publisher had given the author an ultimatum on how many pages they could publish. She set up some very tragic lives, and I wanted her to give them at least a parcel of resolution. I wanted a reaction from the two spoiled daughters when they learned the truth about their doting, proprietary father and to know that the light dawned in Ursula's mind and when she realized that Gerald had deliberately tried to make her believe that she was the problem in their marriage. And I wanted the girls to have, at least, an inkling of what their father had done to their mother. It was amazing, the damage his lies did to them all, including the girls. He basically stole them from their mother, and raised them to be empty, self-centered, vain, snobbish and cold. I hated Gerald Candless. What a rotten s.o.b. I wonder if Ms. vine modeled him after some insufferable, publicly-lionized British author or other celebrity she scorns. Though I was let down by the book's uneventful ending, I will continue to seek out her work. Compared to many contemporary writers, she does attempt to engage her readers in a deliciously entertaining manner - and with great writing to boot.
A wonderful way to discover Barbara Vine .......2006-01-27
I discovered Barbara Vine through this book while living in Hampstead this summer, a location that is featured in many of her other books. It was so compelling that having recently completed about 10 of her Barbara Vine novels (which I believe are superior to the Ruth Rendell novels by the same author), I read this book again. It is truly fascinating, and a total page-turner, stay-up-late-until-you-finish it experience. Having read almost all of her novels now, I think it holds up as one of the best. She writes almost cinematically, although the flashbacks would make it hard to transfer to the big screen. Her characters (even Gerald, who is primarily described through his disillusioned wife) is made to be sympathetic in the end. I highly recommend this book.
Just a Phase?.......2005-11-22
I "discovered" Ruth Rendell almost thirty years ago. I was overseas and books in English were hard to find and expensive when you could find them. From time to time, my mother would send me a carton of paperbacks that she had chosen from secondhand bookshops and library sales. She was guessing at what might interest me. The combination of her good judgment and my desperation for books of any kind meant that I usually read or at least started to read just about everything in the carton.
One carton included Rendell's One Across, Two Down. I didn't read much detective fiction or murder mysteries, but I had gone through an Agatha Christie phase in my teens, and later I would go through a similar Sue Grafton phase. Ruth Rendell's book was unlike anything I had read. There was no hero ("protagonist," the author in The Chimney Sweeper's Boy would correct me) in the conventional sense. None of the characters was particularly likeable. I couldn't identify with any of them. But I was fascinated by the odd story and couldn't stop reading until I had finished.
I continue to be a Rendell fan, but I prefer her Barbara Vine novels, the psychological thrillers with no hero. Inspector Wexford leaves me cold. This still leaves dozens of Rendell books for me to read and reread.
The Chimney Sweeper's Boy is a fine thriller. The characters are fascinating, the plot moves along like a pulp novel, and I really wanted to know what happens next. And like many thrillers and throw-away fiction, I didn't know what was going to happen until the author wanted me to know. I thought I knew several times, but I was wrong. Everything was tied up in a neat package at the end.
Unfortunately, The Chimney Sweeper's Boy doesn't bear scrutiny. As I stopped to think about the story after I was done, I became less satisfied. Real people wouldn't act like that, would they? And the shocking revelation didn't strike me as being quite as earth-shattering as the characters seemed to think it was.
After finding myself skimming the last third of Grasshopper and not even finishing The Blood Doctor, I began to wonder if I had come to the end of a thirty year Ruth Rendell phase? But her latest two, The Rottweiler and Thirteen Steps Down, have reassured me that Rendell is still the master of psychological suspense.
A Crowning Achievement for Barbara Vine (or Ruth Rendell).......2005-09-16
I have been reading my way through all the Barbara Vine books, and I've only got two left, so this one was my tenth or so. This book is a crowning achievement. It is certainly much more than a mystery. It is an extraordinary novel with real characters, a great plot and awfulness running through. As you read the book you know that something terrible is going to happen, but that does not prepare you for the shock of the ending! It all starts witht the death of a famous novelist, and from there we meet his family - a wife who he barely tolerates and two daughters that he adores. One of the daughters wants to write a story of her beloved father's life, but as she begins she finds ancient secrets and mysteries that no one in their family dreamt of. But even then she can't let herself get the whole story, but we the readers are given that story at the very end, and it's a deep and dark place that Ms. Vine takes us to. This is such a rich novel and it deals with some issues that are still kept in closets and behind closed doors. Ms. Vine hits us in the face with our prejudices and our pre-conceived notions, and she does it so skillfully. The book is compelling and totally un-put-downable. I dare you to read it!
Average customer rating:
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The Chimney Sweeper's Boy
Manufacturer: Recorded Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Audio Cassette
ASIN: 0788721712 |
Product Description
This book is recorded on 11 cassettes for 16 hours of listening pleasure. Writing as Barbara Vine, award-winning mystery author Ruth Rendell out-shines even her own brilliant reputation for psychological intrigue. Michael Kimballs work has received international acclaim from critics and authors including Stephen King, who says Kimball writes the sort of book you think about during the day and cant wait to settle back into at night. In Mouth to Mouth, Kimball spins a terrifying tale of retribution, set in an idyllic, sheep-dotted countryside. As Ellen Chambers marriage falls apart, her nephew Neil walks back into her life. Instead of the boy she knew 12 years ago, he is now a handsome young man. Soon, he has offered to rebuild her barn in exchange for lodging. But his offer of help and friendship is part of a larger plan that will leave a trail of deception and murder in its wake. As the barn takes shape, Ellen watches her life and her world change under the spell of forces she no longer knows how to name or control. Narrator George Guidalls performance highlights the mounting suspense in this gripping page-turner that will haunt you long after the last sentence
Customer Reviews:
Delve into the heart.......2007-06-11
Barbara Vine, AKA Ruth Rendell, is at her best in "The Chimney Sweeper's Boy." When you first meet the main characters, you are utterly at a loss to understand their behavior, much less like them. But Vine admirers know that, by the end of the novel, she will have plumbed the depths of the tortured soul of her protagonist. The climax is beyond chilling, a scene out of one's worst nightmare. But the author doesn't leave you in horror. For when you realize what has driven the protagonist into his mode of haughtiness and cruelty, your heart aches with compassion. And Vine meets the requirement of the "well-written novel." Her characters grow in ways that touch the heart; we accept them as fellow strugglers with the human condition. Marian Cates, mwc & associates.The Chimney Sweeper's Boy
Average customer rating:
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The chimney-sweeper's friend, and Climbing-boy's album
James Montgomery
Manufacturer: W. Alexander
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Binding: Unknown Binding
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ASIN: B00086YR46 |
Book Description
With their magic boundaries falling and terrible monsters invading, the Marshalls of Lladrana must follow ancient tradition and Summon a savior from the Exotique land. . .
For Alexa Fitzwalter, the Marshall's call pulled the savvy lawyer into a realm where she barely understood the language, let alone the intricacies of politics and power. Armed only with her wits, a mystical companion and the help of the chevalier Bastien, Alexa must use her very human mind and skills to fight the encroaching evil-and resist manipulation by the Marshall's to force her to stay in Lladrana.
Now torn between her affinity for this realm and Earth, will she return home if given the chance? Or dare she risk everything for a land not her own?
Customer Reviews:
Robin D Owens - great writter!.......2007-10-10
This is a great book, and a great series. I have read all 3 books so far and am looking forward to the next one!
another great series start for Owens.......2007-08-14
I loved the Celta books, so I sort of resisted the summoning. They are not pure romance, but more of a adventure romance you see a lot starting to do. You might say, Owens really was one of the forerunners of this style of book.
The adventure was amazing, the emotions dead on, and I found myself really "seeing" her world building.
I really love the premise of women take from this world to save another. These would make a great movie.
*yawn*.......2007-08-05
This book was SO boring. I really, really wanted to like this book. I promise that I tried, but nothing ever happens in this story! Also, the characters and their relationships are poorly developed. Usually there is at least one redeeming quality to a book, but I can't find any for this one. The only reason to pick this book up is if you need help falling asleep.
Middle of the road fantasy offering.......2007-07-30
This fantasy offering from Robin Owen tends to stick to accepted fantasy dogma.
You have the "normal" person who turns out to be special, a menacing and malignant evil, magic, romance, struggle against the establishment and self.
The world building in this novel is interesting. It seems to be a parallel world in which magic exists. People with magic have gold or silver locks of hair. There is a complicated caste system based both on magical ability and your corresponding job as well as your birth.
The issue I had with this book is that the characters fell a little flat. The main character, Alexa, is transported to a different land, and immediately starts accepting it. Several times, it is stated that whenever someone asks for help, she feels like she has to give it. There is some superficial character building in which you learn that Alexa's friend died recently and that she grew up in foster homes. However, other than these bald facts, you never really see how these experiences have shaped Alexa. It is difficult to see Alexa as a stalwart hero-type because of the way she is portrayed in the book.
All this aside, the book was interesting to read, though predictably formulaic.
WOW!.......2007-07-27
I loved this book so much, I've read it probably 4-5 times. Robin creates another world and I love going there. The only problem is waiting for the next one. Excellent book!
Book Description
Those Who Brave the Challenges of Taming the Rugged Canadian Frontier
Hunter Stone and his wife, Betsy, dreamed of raising their family on the Canadian frontier, and that dream had brought them west. But their hope of a promising future is suddenly shattered when Red Wolf, a Crow Indian on the warpath, burns Stone's homestead and kidnaps Betsy while Stone is away at the trading post purchasing supplies.
Suspecting the perpetrator of this villainous deed is the same renegade responsible for burning his neighbor's ranch, Stone is driven by rage as he rides out to rescue his wife. His encounter with Red Wolf and his warriors ends in defeat and leaves him with a blinding wrath and an obsession for revenge.
Reena O'Donnell, a young missionary to the Canadian Assiniboine Indians, finds Hunter, who is wounded and barely alive, and nurses him back to health. Though his body has healed, the deep scars of anger and lust for vengeance nearly destroy him. Will joining the North-West Mounted Police help him leave the past behind?
Can Reena's faith and prayers make a difference in the life of Hunter, who has lost everything?
Customer Reviews:
By Honor Bound.......2003-06-16
I loved this book so much, I went out and got the rest to the series to read. The story line and the characterizations of the characters are incredible. I recommend this book to anyone looking for a great read!
Honor Bound.......2002-03-11
I am a very picky reader. I love to read, but it has to be the perfect story line. If you know what I mean. Lots of people think of Christain books as being boring. that is what I thought when I saw this book. After a friend told me to read it I was wrapped up in the story line! I even went out of my way to find, and buy the rest in the series! This book, By Honor Bound, is a story of real life problems, plus heros and heroines that will stay in your heart. If you are looking for a book (or books) to read, find one of the Guardians of the North books and dig in!!!
A wonderful Book.......2000-03-23
I have read the first 2 of the Guardians of the North so far. I have enjoyed them immensley and can't wait to read the others! I would definately recommend these books to anyone who enjoys history, a romance, or a wonderful Christian novel! I have enjoyed many other novels by his father Gilbert Morris. I have read the entire House of Winslow series and can't wait for the latest book to come out! I would certainly recommend this book to anyone willing to read it!
Enjoyable.......1999-10-14
I've read the whole "Guardian of the North" series.It is well written and easy to read. The history of early Canada wasnew to me and very interesting. I recommend that the books be read in the order intended although that is not absolutely necessary. If you like Christian fiction, this series is worth a try!
Average customer rating:
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Sixth Circuit honors guardian volunteers.: An article from: Florida Bar News
Manufacturer: Florida Bar
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Digital
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ASIN: B0008DHXJA
Release Date: 2005-07-31 |
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This digital document is an article from Florida Bar News, published by Florida Bar on May 15, 2003. The length of the article is 439 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: Sixth Circuit honors guardian volunteers.
Publication:
Florida Bar News (Magazine/Journal)
Date: May 15, 2003
Publisher: Florida Bar
Volume: 30
Issue: 10
Page: 35(1)
Distributed by Thomson Gale
Product Description
In the mist-shrouded past, the world of Azeroth teemed with wonders of every kind. Magical races and ancient beasts strode alongside the tribes of manuntil the arrival of the demonic Burning Legion and its baneful lord, Sargeras. Now, dragons, elves, orcs and dwarves all vie for supremacy across their war-torn kingdomsall part of a grand, malevolent scheme to determine the fate of the world....Day of the Dragon: A mission to free the great Dragonqueen from her Orc captors sends the maverick mage, Rhonin, on a perilous journey into the land of Khaz Modan. He cannot know that a far-reaching conspiracy is behind his quest, or that he will be forced into a dangerous alliance with the most dire of dragons....Lord of the Clans: An orc raised by cruel human masters who sought to mold him into their perfect pawn, Thrall is driven by both the savagery in his heart and the cunning of his upbringing to pursue a destiny he is only beginning to understandto break his bondage and rediscover the ancient traditions of his people. The Last Guardian: The godlike Guardians of Tirisfal are each charged through the ages with fighting a lonely secret war against the Burning Legion. Medivh is to become their greatest champion. But darkness taints his soul, turning his powers to evil. His struggle against the malice within him becomes one with the fate of Azeroth itself....Of Blood and Honor: The paladin Tirion Fordring had always believed the Orcs were vile and corrupt. But an unexpected act of honor and compassion sets in motion a chain of events that will challenge his most fundamental beliefs and force him to decide, once and for all, who are the men...and who are the monsters.
Customer Reviews:
senior reader.......2007-06-26
being 63 and female doesn't mean i have to read those horrible womenly books. i read all science fiction of certain favorite authors. this book popped up during a search for something to read on a site and i just had to order. man, i am not sorry at all that i purchased it. great stories through out and plan to order other individual warcraft books. you will not be disappointed either when you have the book in hand and can scan the pages. a secret--- buy it from amazon for it is cheaper then other sites. i paid over 18.00 dollars for mine. look it up and get it fast. it's has 4 novels in one. enjoy.
Average customer rating:
- great story inspite of slow start
- Not Free SF Reader
- 1 half boring politics, 1 half decent story
- Boldly Go...
- A good solid work of Sci-Fi from Greg Bear
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Moving Mars: A Novel
Greg Bear
Manufacturer: Tor Science Fiction
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Darwin's Radio
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Eon
ASIN: 0812524802
Release Date: 2005-05-03 |
Amazon.com
In this 1995 Nebula Award-winning novel, a revolution is transforming the formerly passive Earth-colony of Mars. While opposing political factions on Mars battle for the support of colonists, scientists make a staggering scientific breakthrough that at once fuels the conflict and creates a united Mars front, as the technically superior Earth tries to take credit for it. Backed against a wall, colonial leaders are forced to make a monumental decision that changes the future of Mars forever.
Book Description
She is a daughter of one of Mars's oldest, most conservative Binding Multiples--the extended family syndicates that colonized the red planet. But Casseia Majumdar has a dream of an independent Mars, born in the student protests of 2171. During those brief days of idealism she forged bonds of friendship and hatred that set the stage for an astonishing war or revolution on Mars.
Customer Reviews:
great story inspite of slow start.......2007-09-29
Found the SF parts of the story - especially the Quantum Logic thinkers part - truly amazing. I found the entire concept - that of a young Mars finding its own voice - really well conceived and well written. Perhaps the only shortcoming (for me) was the first somewhat 250 pages before Bear gets to the real meaty SF stuff. It wasn't excruciatingly slow - but the first half wasn't a page turner. The second half was!
Not Free SF Reader.......2007-09-04
New colony gets a transportation industry leg-up on the old bastiches on Earth.
The inhabitants of Mars have to deal with trying to build a society how they want, and not in the old way that has been done before. This requires a lot of politicking and brainstorming.
They also have to deal with the usual greedy types that covet their resources and technology back where they came from.
1 half boring politics, 1 half decent story.......2007-08-27
There are two halves to this book: the boring, political half followed by the adventurous plot in the second half. One would expect the interlude to be between chapters or to over the course of a chapter. However, the shift from the halves was brought upon on one single page - like, "WHAM! here's the other part of the book you wanted to read but I made you read all the character background and political dialouge first. Haha!" Jarring would be a good word for the interlude.
Because half the book is boring (character building, political dialouge, etc) the entire book doesn't get 5 stars. The author is lucky he made a darn good last half of the book... but even then I deemed it a bit ridiculous and over the top. The ultimate ending seemed extreme (a bit ridiculous, but mostly impressive and original).
Boldly Go..........2006-10-02
Moving Mars is a high-quality story of imagination, science, and good characters. Greg Bear imagines a Mars set nearly two centuries in the future inhabited by fossils of the wet past of Mars and humans who dream of independence from Earthly overlords. The main character, Casseia Majumdar, is a budding politician who sees the world strictly through human terms. Her counterpart, Charles Franklin, is a scientist who sees the world in terms of epochs, physics, and technology. Together, they struggle through a budding Earth/Mars war and find the means to save their homeworld Mars by bending space to move their planet out of harm's way.
A good solid work of Sci-Fi from Greg Bear.......2006-09-07
This book was a fine piece of science fiction, and if you've loved Greg Bear's other works, you'll probably enjoy "Moving Mars" just as much.
I've read quite a few of Bear's works so far, and this book encouraged me to want to read more. The science in the book is solid, and the plot enticing. It took me a little while (
<10 pages) to get "into" the text and characters, which is unusual - but from a slow beginning came a story of great interest. The plot is set on Mars, and revolves around scientific and political developments in the late 22nd century, after a crowded earth still bursting at the seams has successfully colonized both Mars and the Moon. If I would have changed anything, I feel like this book could have used more epilogue - as I was reading the story I didn't want it to end, though end it must. As our intrepid characters accomplish their mission, save themselves from certain annihilation and look out over mars with new hope for their future I hungered for more story.
A great read, and one I would recommend to friends.
Dominic Sebastian
ebacherdom.blotspot.com
060907.0144
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Casados Y Felices/ Thriving Marriages: Guia De Psicologia Y Espiritualidad Para Relaciones De Pareja / an Inspirational and Practical Guide to Lasting Happiness
Juan Andres Yzaguirre , and
Claire Frazier
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ASIN: 8497150627 |
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