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Coastliners by Joanne Harris
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Coastliners: A Novel

by Joanne Harris

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828205,606 (3.33)29
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William Morrow (2002), Hardcover

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Showing 1-5 of 19 (next | show all)
This novel is about a place and the local characters seen through the eyes of someone who is almost an outsider. A novel about home and belonging; about love and family; life and death.

Returning home to a small island just off the Breton coast, after her mother's death, Mado finds the village in decline. Seen as interfering, she tries to return life to the village. The relationships, feuds and lives of the locals play out against the sea — what it gives and what it takes.

Joanne Harris writes with obvious love about this small community; creating wonderful images of life and the power of nature. ( )
  calm | Feb 4, 2010 |
tasty ( )
  aletheia21 | Jan 4, 2010 |
Feinsinniges Buch weckt Sehnsucht nach Mee(h)r: Joanne Harris ist die Meisterin der feinen Stimmungen und Gefühle. Auch in diesem Buch "Die blaue Muschel" zeichnen die zarten Zwischentöne und sachten Stimmungen ihren Schreibstil aus. Sprachlich ist dieses Buch ein Hochgenuss!
Mado kehrt nach langer Zeit auf ihre Heimatinsel Le Devin zurück, der sie als Kind gemeinsam mit ihrer Mutter den Rücken gekehrt hatte. Nach deren Tod möchte Mado den Kontakt zu ihrem Vater wieder aufnehmen, einem kauzigen und einsamen Inselbewohner.
Schnell gewöhnt sich Mado wieder an die Langsamkeit der Insel. Hier ticken die Uhren andres. Und schnell ist sie mitten in die alltäglichen Kleinigkeiten und Beziehungen eingetaucht. Und nicht nur Mado beginnt sich zu verändern, nein, auch die Inselbewohner verändern sich durch Mado...
Joanne Harris versteht es, den Leser mitzunehmen auf diese kleine Insel in der Bretagne. Feinfühlig schildert sie die zwischenmenschlichen Beziehungen, die vom gegenseitigen Geben und Nehmen beeinflusst werden- gleichsam wie die Wellen und Stürme an der Küste das Leben auf Le Devin beeinflussen. Wie kaum eine anderer Autor schafft sie es, ihren Sprachfluss dem Inhalt anzugleichen und das zeichnet dieses Buch aus.
Leider kommt das Ende zu schnell und zerstört gerade diesen Eindruck. Dennoch ein Lieblingsbuch!
  r1hard | Nov 22, 2009 |
Took this to read on holiday to Brittany and it was perfect holiday reading. I like Joanne Harris' style of things and it was undemanding yet satisfying. ( )
  samsheep | Jun 9, 2009 |
Not fun. Downbeat and technical -- more than I'd ever want to know about tides. ( )
  picardyrose | May 27, 2009 |
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Epigraph
Dedication
to my mother Jeannette Payen Short
First words
Islands are different.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Book description

Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0060958014, Paperback)

After three novels which centered around gastronomic pleasures, Joanne Harris's Coastliners focuses on more astringent joys. Sea, gritty sand, and adverse weather conditions replace Chocolat, Blackberry Wine, and Five Quarters of the Orange. Set on a small, blustery fishing island off the coast of France, it tells the story of Mado, a young woman who returns to her childhood home to find the local community torn apart by family feuds, bad tides, and murky political machinations.

Passionate, stubborn Mado, whose "head is full of rocks," tries to save the livelihoods of the villagers of Les Salants by urging them to work together to save the beach from erosion, both natural and man-made. The villagers, written with endearing panache by Harris, are an eccentric, curmudgeonly bunch, who eventually cooperate with the help of Flynn, a charismatic stranger with a shady past. He's not the only man of mystery in Mado's life; her father, taciturn Grosjean, has a secretive heart that's as "prickly and tightly layered as an artichoke," and local, wealthy businessman Brismand also seems to be hiding something. Mado does her best to unravel these mysteries, while attempting to keep a hold on her own sense of self in the claustrophobic, close community. It's not only the shore line that takes a buffeting. The villagers and the island are so vividly described that it's impossible not to become engrossed in Mado's story. Coastliners is a book about longing to belong, and Joanne Harris charts that emotional voyage compellingly. --Eithne Farry, Amazon.co.uk

(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 14:22:59 -0500)

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