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Black and Blue by Anna Quindlen
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Black and Blue

by Anna Quindlen

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1,782291,854 (3.46)39
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Chatto & Windus (1998), Paperback, 256 pages

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Interesting story about a battered woman who leaves her husband (who is a cop) in hopes that her son will not become the same type of man her husband was. Very interesting look at the mind of someone who is manipulated like that, a little graphic sometimes so I wouldn't recommend to just anyone, but a good story to understand how many women feel like they have no choice and no way to escape. ( )
  mmillet | Dec 14, 2009 |
This is the story of Fran Benedetto. She has been married to Bobby Benedetto, a New York police officer, for fifteen years. They have a son named Robert. She works as a nurse. And Bobby has been beating her since she was 19 years old.

As the book begins, Fran has started her journey away from Bobby with the help of a battered woman's organization that is run just like the witness protection program. She takes Robert and tries to settle down in an anonymous town in Florida, but all the time she is looking over her shoulder and waiting for her husband to find her. Gradually she starts to make friends and find work, Robert has a buddy in their apartment building and enjoys playing sports at school. Fran even finds a man who loves her, and who she thinks she can trust. But eventually, the inevitable has to happen.

Quindlen is a good writer, and the story is well-written with compelling (although sometimes a little clichéd) characters and a suspenseful ending. By the nature of the subject matter, the plot is pretty suffocating (everything is defined in terms of Fran's abuse by Bobby, and there is no doubt that he is going to find her and Robert eventually). I can't really hold the singular focus of the novel against Quindlen, since I'm sure that a woman in Fran's situation couldn't help but experience life just the way Quindlen writes it, but it does not make this an easy or really very enjoyable book to read.

[full review here: http://spacebeer.blogspot.com/2009/11...] ( )
  kristykay22 | Nov 22, 2009 |
After years of being trapped in an abusive marriage, Fran finally escapes and starts a new life with a new identity.

Even as she gradually heals and she and her son settle into their new life, Fran can't stop looking over her shoulder. She knows that Bobby will never stop looking for her. And she wonders if she will survive... ( )
  mrsdwilliams | Sep 21, 2009 |
I finished the book in two day's, and would have finished it in less time, if I could read faster or had I more time. It was a beautiful read.
  ckavich | May 12, 2009 |
No one writes quite like Anna Quindlen. In my Top Ten, easily. You can read the full review of Black and Blue and other fiction favorites at: http://laurareviews.blogspot.com/sear... Fiction ( )
  LauraCococcia | Apr 9, 2009 |
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Dedication
For Quin Krovatin

From one writer to another,

with admiration and enormous love.
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The first time my husband hit me I was nineteen years old.
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Black and Blue (Anna Quindlen novel)

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0385333137, Paperback)

Oprah Book Club® Selection, April 1998: "The first time my husband hit me I was nineteen years old," begins Fran Benedetto, the broken heroine of Anna Quindlen's Black and Blue. With one sweeping sentence, the door to an abused and tortured world is swung wide open and the psyche of a crushed and tattered self-image exposed. "Frannie, Frannie, Fran"--as Bobby Benedetto liked to call her before smashing her into kitchen appliances--was a young, energetic nursing student when she met her husband-to-be at a local Brooklyn bar. She was instantly captivated by his dark, brooding looks and magnetic personality, but her fascination soon solidified into a marital prison sentence of incessant abuse and the destruction of her own identity. After an especially horrific beating and rape, Fran realizes that the next attack could be the last. Fearing her son would be left alone with Bobby, she escapes one morning with her child. Fran's salvation comes in the form of Patty Bancroft and Co., a relocation agency for abused women that touts better service than the witness protection program. Armed only with a phone number, a few hundred dollars, and the help of several anonymous volunteers, Fran begins a new life. The agency relocates her to Florida, where she becomes Beth Crenshaw, a recently divorced home-care assistant from Delaware. Fran and her son adapt, meeting challenges with unexpected resilience and resolve until their past returns to haunt them. Quindlen renders the intricacies of spousal abuse with eerie accuracy, taking the reader deep within the realm of dysfunctional human ties. However, her vivid descriptions of abuse, emotional disintegration, and acute loneliness at times numb the reader with their realism.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:03 -0400)

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