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Loading... The Night Watch (Unabridged)by Sarah Waters
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Our reading group chose this book as one of our selections for 2008 based on (from what everyone could remember) the fact that the author has won numerous awards for her writing in England. So with that said, my expectation was high. The novel starts out in post-World War II England and with each section goes back in time. So in essence you know how the story ends at the beginning but it is the discovering of how the characters arrived there that makes for an interesting book. Other than this technique...I did not care for the book...I had no interest in the characters at all except for maybe Kay who was the most redeemable and interesting...a masculine lesbian who was a paramedic during the war. If this book wasn't to be read for reading group, I would have not finished it. ( )Sarah Waters weaves together several stories to create a well-paced novel filled with memorable characters. Moving back through the 1940's, The Night Watch tells the stories of Londoners Kay, Viv, Duncan & Helen. Not only is The Night Watch told in a fascinating and unique way but Sarah Waters is able to create characters that are truly intreguing and leave the reader wanting to turn just one more page in a bid to unravel a little bit more information about their lives. In The Night Watch, Sarah Waters signals an ambitious leap forward via her use of reverse chronology and the relatively complex intermingling of her characters lives. Her efforts were rewarded handsomely, earning places on the Man Booker and Orange Prize shortlists. Having just devoured the book in a couple of late-night sittings, I'd have to agree the recognition was well deserved. Waters' cleverly interwoven threads mesh together to create the stories of five young Londoners during World War Two. I found myself most intrigued by the Kay-Helen-Julia story; the sections about the young prisoner Duncan were somewhat dull by comparison. Yet I can easily imagine that for some readers the reverse would be true. Overall, The Night Watch was an engaging, thoughtful and subtly sexy book - what in years to come will be known as "vintage Waters". Ik vond dit een prachtig boek. Mooi geschreven (goed vertaald) en erg goed dat het verteld werd van 1947 naar 1941. Dat bracht een speciale spanning met zich mee. no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:24 -0400)
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