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The Rain Before It Falls by Jonathan Coe
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The Rain Before It Falls

by Jonathan Coe

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3251414,809 (3.58)9
Recently added bysandpiper, frutz, hkhorlos, deschamps, Lurmo, DerekVC, private library, aliastori, bartsnel, Abessinian
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Showing 1-5 of 10 (next | show all)
I needed a day to process this book after finishing it. This is hands down, one of the most well-written novels I have read in a long time. The character depth is astounding! I felt as though I knew these people, that their story could have been in my family.

Jonathan Coe's highly acclaimed "The Rain Before It Falls" is an epic tale of love, loss and above all family. When Gill finds out her Aunt has passed away she is left to deal with her estate. What she finds is a series of tapes that her Aunt Rosamond had recorded with instructions that they be delivered to a girl - now a woman- named Imogen. Gill vaguely remembers Imogen from her Aunt Rosamonds 50th birthday party, but aside from that occasion knows not much about her.

Gill is unable to locate Imogen, so she and her daughters go ahead and listen to the tapes. What follows is a description of 20 photographs. How amazing! It was like looking through a photo album and having all the circumstances surrounding those photos told to you.

What unfolds is a story of inevitability. A series of events all seemingly linked, and tragic at their very core. What comes from those events is Imogen, a little girl that lost her vision in an awful accident when she was 3 years old.

This book is a must read! You will find yourself reading this book rather quickly. The emotions Coe evokes are strong, and you will be compelled to continue on. ( )
hoot | May 2, 2009 |  
I really enjoyed this novel and the sting in the tail. Set around a number of photographs, it tells a sad story. A slow burner, it ripped a hole in my pocket in its overpriced airport format.
jon1lambert | Sep 29, 2008 |  
This had amazing reviews but I found it rather disappointing. Everyone in it seemed oddly distanced. This may because of the way it was written as someone speaking on a tape recorder about long past events. I expected more of it. ( )
wilgils | Aug 9, 2008 |  
Lovely characters a sad but interesting storyline, a good read.Try it I'm sure you will enjoy.
jen12 | Aug 4, 2008 |  
Lovely characters a sad but interesting storyline, a good read.Try it I'm sure you will enjoy.
jen12 | Aug 4, 2008 |  
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When the telephone rang Gill was outside, raking the leaves into coppery piles, while her husband shovelled them on to a bonfire.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0307268039, Hardcover)

Following The Rotters’ Club and its sequel, The Closed Circle, Jonathan Coe now offers his first stand-alone novel in a decade, a story of three generations of women whose destinies reach from the English countryside in World War II to London, Toronto, and southern France at the turn of the new century.
Evacuated to Shropshire during the Blitz, eight-year-old Rosamond forged a bond with her cousin Beatrix that augured the most treasured and devastating moments of her life. She recorded these memories sixty years later, just before her death, on cassettes she bequeathed to a woman she hadn’t seen in decades. When her beloved niece, Gill, plays the tapes in hopes of locating this unwitting heir, she instead hears a family saga swathed in promise and betrayal: the story of how Beatrix, starved of her mother’s affection, conceived a fraught bloodline that culminated in heart-stopping tragedy—its chief victim being her own granddaughter. And as Rosamond explores the ties that bound these generations together and shaped her experience all along, Gill grows increasingly haunted by how profoundly her own recollections—not to mention the love she feels for her grown daughters, listening alongside her—are linked to generations of women she never knew.
A stirring, masterful portrait of motherhood and family secrets, The Rain Before It Falls is also a meditation on the tapestries we weave out of the past, whether transcendent or horrific. Hailed by the Los Angeles Times for his “sustained, intricate brilliance,” Jonathan Coe once again proves himself “an artist of character and of his characters’ stories,” here more astutely than ever before.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:19 -0400)

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