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Loading... Stern Menby Elizabeth Gilbert
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I wanted to like this -- I loved "Eat, Pray, Love", but it was slow, the ending was predictable and not satisfactory and I didn't find myself "liking" any of the characters, who were all deeply troubled and flawed. The best parts were the the facts about lobsters at the start of each chapter. I am glad it was only $1at a garage sale. ( )Despite the vivid writing style, it was hard to get into this story as nothing really happens for most of the book. Also, I never cared for the main character, she was lifeless. At the end, she forges a great solution for her islands, and yet she accepts being manipulated by relatives regarding major life decisions. Odd. I liked the setting a lot, I grew to like the characters and I really appreciated the ending. I wouldn't have hung in after the first 100 pages if I hadn't come to this website and read some decent reviews. Glad I did. punxsygal 0 books / 0 friends / 0 groups A book about the feuding between the lobster men of two islands off the coast of Maine. Ruth Thomas is born into this feud. Her mother leaves and she grows up on the island with limited friends. Following her high school years in a boarding school in Delaware she returns to the island where she just drifts along for awhile. Eventually she falls for Owen Wishnell, a young man who dreams of being a lobster man. It is a story of relationships--Ruth with the woman who substitutes as her mother, her friend the "Senator" who has never left the island or gone on the sea, her dour father and his even dourer friend, Angus, and the strange relationship to the Ellis family. I recommend it for the interesting characters and relationships, the resistence to change and the everyday life of the lobster men. no reviews | add a review
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What Ruth does (hang around with her eccentric island friends, fall in love, organize the lobstermen) makes for an engaging book that's all the more charming for its rather lumpy, slow-paced plotting. Gilbert delivers a kind of delicious ethnography of lobster-fishing culture, if such a thing is possible, as well as a love story and a bildungsroman. But best of all, she possesses an ear for the ridiculous ways people communicate. One of Mrs. Pommeroy's young sons, "in addition to having the local habit of not pronouncing r at the end of a word--could not say any word that started with r.... What's more, for a long time everyone on Fort Niles Island imitated him. Over the whole spread of the island, you could hear the great strong fishermen complaining that they had to mend their wopes or fix their wigging or buy a new short-wave wadio."
The beauty of Gilbert's book is that she gives us an isolated rural culture, and refuses to settle for finding humor in its backwardness. Instead she gives us a community of uneducated but razor-sharp wits, and produces an impressive comic debut. --Claire Dederer
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:05 -0400)
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