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Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2540 KP) rated The Horse and His Boy (Chronicles of Narnia, #5) in Books
Mar 9, 2018
A marriage proposal to a grown Susan is really just a plot to take over Narnia, and the only people who can stop it are a run away slave and a talking horse. A fun adventure that has grown on me the more times I've read it.
Read my full review at <a href="http://carstairsconsiders.blogspot.com/2013/03/book-review-horse-and-his-boy-by-c-s.html">Carstairs Considers</a>.
Read my full review at <a href="http://carstairsconsiders.blogspot.com/2013/03/book-review-horse-and-his-boy-by-c-s.html">Carstairs Considers</a>.
Purrsistently (46 KP) rated Breakfast at Tiffany's in Books
Jun 21, 2018
Honestlys not sure how I feel about this one. There were glaring elements I hated (the narrating attitude about women and race especially), but things that I think are worth looking at like child “marriage” in the US and calling a girl who’d been raped repeatedly as a pre teen a “whore.” It’s a solid and deserved slap in the face for anyone inclined to idealize the period.
AT (1676 KP) rated Marriage Story (2019) in Movies
Dec 21, 2019
I enjoyed Marriage Story, for as much as one can enjoy that type of situation. It was frustrating and heartbreaking, and had some funny spots thrown in. It was a raw story of a family going through a divorce. (Granted, it was a family that had access to money for bulldog legal teams, so it was both, "easy," and ugly.) Adam Driver was great in his role as Charlie.
The Kid Stays in the Picture: A Hollywood Life
Book
From his marriage to Ali McGraw, his cocaine bust, the accusations of murder, the friendships with...
Under the Channel
Emily Boyce, Jane Aitken and Gilles Petel
Book
Roland decides to travel to London - and not just in order to progress the inquiry. It's also a...
The Color Purple (1985)
Movie Watch
The emotional film follows a young woman who has been abused, neglected and taken advantage of her...
DW
Divorce, Why Me? - Why Not!
Book
"Divorce, Why Me? Why Not!" chronicles the single life, travesties in marriage, and one man's...
Jane Campion recommended Scenes from a Marriage (1973) in Movies (curated)
Cori June (3033 KP) rated An Ignorance of Means in Books
Feb 2, 2022
Not my normal genre I quite enjoyed this adventure of this completely sheltered girl who entered into a marriage that was not at all what she expected. The journey that I went on in this intrigued me and had me wondering what was going to happen next.
Sometimes I wanted to shake the main character and I feared for what was going to happen and routed for her all the way.
Sometimes I wanted to shake the main character and I feared for what was going to happen and routed for her all the way.
Kristy H (1252 KP) rated Good Company in Books
Apr 15, 2021
Well-written albeit slow going look at marriage and motherhood
Flora Mancini has been happily married for twenty years. But that foundation crumbles when she finds her husband's wedding ring--the one he claimed he lost when their daughter was five--in the back of a drawer. Now she wonders what exactly Julian has kept hidden from her all these years. Is their whole marriage, their whole life, based on a lie?
This is such a hard book to review, because I loved Sweeney's THE NEST so very much. And GOOD COMPANY, while a nice book, is just not THE NEST. Don't get me wrong, it's not a bad book, it just did not move me as much as THE NEST.
GOOD COMPANY offers a thoughtful look into marriage and relationships. It's one of those interesting novels where it feels like not much happens, yet it truly covers the span of an entire relationship--a whole marriage. But there is a lot of ruminating, a lot of speculation, and a lot of angst. It's a very New York sort of book, even if Flora and Julian move to Los Angeles when their daughter, Ruby, is young.
This book is well-written, of course. Sweeney is a wonderful writer. It switches between time periods (the present, and going back in Flora and Julian's relationship) and various points of view, which include Flora, Julian, Ruby, and Flora's best friend, famous actress Margot Ledder. I probably felt the most for Ruby--it's hard to really sympathize much for the adults here. And this is a very "theater" book, with Flora, Julian, and Margot all being in the business. If that's not your thing (it's not mine), it's a little harder to feel engaged in some of the story.
Overall, this is an interesting read, but it can be slow going at times and hard to feel engaged with all the characters. If you like introspective, character-driven reads or you're a theater geek, GOOD COMPANY may be for you. 3 stars.
This is such a hard book to review, because I loved Sweeney's THE NEST so very much. And GOOD COMPANY, while a nice book, is just not THE NEST. Don't get me wrong, it's not a bad book, it just did not move me as much as THE NEST.
GOOD COMPANY offers a thoughtful look into marriage and relationships. It's one of those interesting novels where it feels like not much happens, yet it truly covers the span of an entire relationship--a whole marriage. But there is a lot of ruminating, a lot of speculation, and a lot of angst. It's a very New York sort of book, even if Flora and Julian move to Los Angeles when their daughter, Ruby, is young.
This book is well-written, of course. Sweeney is a wonderful writer. It switches between time periods (the present, and going back in Flora and Julian's relationship) and various points of view, which include Flora, Julian, Ruby, and Flora's best friend, famous actress Margot Ledder. I probably felt the most for Ruby--it's hard to really sympathize much for the adults here. And this is a very "theater" book, with Flora, Julian, and Margot all being in the business. If that's not your thing (it's not mine), it's a little harder to feel engaged in some of the story.
Overall, this is an interesting read, but it can be slow going at times and hard to feel engaged with all the characters. If you like introspective, character-driven reads or you're a theater geek, GOOD COMPANY may be for you. 3 stars.






