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Loading... The Rope Walk: A Novelby Carrie Brown
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I absolutely loved this book. It is always so special when you pull a book off the library shelf that you never heard of by an author you never heard of and it turns out so special. The unlikely friendships and character building were the elements that stood out to me. ( )Another unexpected book. This title is the All Iowa Reads book for 2009 and I read it in anticipation of doing some book discussions about it at work. I enjoyed the story of the two kids quite a lot. The one thing I had a great deal of trouble with throughout was the fact that the protagonist was only 10 years old. Just TURNED 10 on the first page of the book, as a matter of fact. Again and again I thought -- she is ONLY 10, she would NOT be thinking like this, she would not be so sophisticated in her thoughts. Had she been maybe even 12, I would have found that more believeable. Age aside though, the two kids had a remarkable summer and learned a lot. It was nice and I thought very realistic that Theo and Alice chose to have a friendly relationship with Alice's father's friend Kenneth, well done, especially the parts where the kids were kind of disgusted by his illness and had a hard time sometimes being with him. The rope walk itself, the one in the book, was a very interesting idea. On her tenth birthday, Alice meets Theo, who is the grandson of her father's friend. After his grandmother suffers a debilitating stroke, Theo ends up spending most of the summer with Alice and her family and they become friends. They also befriend Kenneth, an elderly man who moves back to his home town because he is no longer able to care for himself. The book deals with the dynamics between the three unlikely characters. Throughout the summer, Alice seems to become conscious of life beyond her isolated Vermont town and her extended family. I enjoyed this book which really captures the innocence and coming of age struggles of kids. very "atmoshperic." When the plot finally kicks in 2/3rds through the book, things improve. the writing is elegant, but not quite enough to sustain the novel. What a dazzling, wonderful novel. One of the best I've read this year (2007). Richly satisfying. Denton 0.145 seconds to build listing no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0375424636, Hardcover)The Rope Walk brings us the dazzling story of a pivotal summer in the life of Alice, a redheaded tomboy and motherless girl who is beloved and protected by her five older brothers and her widower father, a professor of Shakespeare. On Memorial Day, at her tenth birthday party in the garden of her Vermont village home, Alice meets two people unlike any she’s known before. Theo is a mixed-race New York City kid visiting his white grandparents for the summer. Kenneth is a cosmopolitan artist with AIDS who has come home to convalesce with his middle-aged sister. Alice and Theo form an instant bond and, almost as quickly, find themselves drawn into the orbit of the magisterial Kenneth. When the children begin a daily routine of reading aloud to the artist, who is losing his eyesight, they discover the journals of Lewis and Clark and decide to embark on their own wilderness adventure: they plan and secretly build a “rope walk” through the woods for Kenneth and in the process learn the first of many hard truths about the way adults see the world, no matter that they are often wrong.The great gift of The Rope Walk is its exquisitely poised writing. Alice’s narrative is a profound experience of innocence, of perception balanced between childhood and adulthood. The flying spark of new friendship, the first intimation of adult love, the consolation of devotion, which allow Alice and Theo to shed light in the midst of darkness and to find joy in mutual understanding: these glistening threads are drawn together in a timeless story–profound, seductive, wise, and moving, from first to last. (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:58 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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