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Adrienne Dines

Author of The Jigsaw Maker (Transita)

3 Works 53 Members 7 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Adrienne Dines

Works by Adrienne Dines

The Jigsaw Maker (Transita) (2006) 22 copies, 3 reviews
Soft Voices Whispering (2006) 16 copies, 4 reviews
Toppling Miss April (2005) 15 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
female

Members

Reviews

7 reviews
I found this a bit slow-moving at first. Lizzie is the main character; she’s middle-aged, and rather uptight. A younger man called Jim calls into her shop, explaining that he makes jigsaws, and is looking for some local memories...

The story switches between 2006, which is the present day of the novel, and 1969, when Lizzie was a mostly innocent child of ten. She recounts stories of the nuns who taught her, and the day trip they took to the zoo... and there's much that the reader learns show more through her misunderstandings of other more adult situations.

I had guessed some of the turns of the plot, but not all of them. By the time I was half-way through this book, I was so engrossed I could hardly put it down.

The writing is nicely-paced, and brings out the characters so that I could almost see them. I thought the plotting and gradual revelation of the ‘jigsaw’ of Lizzie’s life was cleverly done. Having said that, it wasn’t a warm and uplifting story, but shocking in places, and quite draining at times.

Nevertheless, I enjoyed it very much and would recommend it to anyone who likes powerful women’s fiction.
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When Eleanor Morrissey leaves Kildoran on a dark September night in 1930, nobody is sorry to see her go and nobody expects to see her return. As far as the villagers are concerned, the Morrisseys have been shamed out of town forever. Fifty years later, some visitors attend the funeral of the convent's Mother Superior. When the funeral is over, one woman stays behind. Until she is free to leave again, she must struggle to understand her legacy - a legacy of voices. Threatening, angry, show more accusing voices that only she can hear, because they are soft voices - whispering

Well as expected I loved this! Set in a small village in Ireland it moves between 1980 and 1930 - plenty of secrets to be revealed which really makes it a page turner. Sister Pius is a wonderful character, at the begining she appears hard and unyeilding, but the more you get to know her and where and what she has come from, the more understanding and sympathy you have for her. In fact I loved all the characters, and cheered for Emer too.

signed copy
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While I did enjoy this book, I have marked it down because I found it confusing in several places; there were rather too many characters who were related to each other down the generations and some family trees in the beginning would have clarified the relationships considerably.
Having said that, the characters were well drawn and very varied, particularly the miserable nun Sister Pius and the more outgoing nun, Sister Agnus.

The action revoles around Kildoran, a small village in Ireland, show more where a traumatic event in the 1930s is still inpinging on the lives of its inhabitants 50 years later. The cast includes many members of a convent, both before they entered and many years later, when life before the veil seems a distant, sometimes haunting, memory.
As the stories of the various characetrs involved are revealed, it is impossible not to become drawn into the life of this tiny village.

An enjoyable read but not one I would heartily recommend.
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½
This is an excellent book! Poignant, suspenseful, brilliantly written without an extraneous word anywhere. Set in a small Irish town in the 1980s with a very well-executed flashback to 1930 in the middle. Reminiscent at times of Maeve Binchy. Highly recommended.

Statistics

Works
3
Members
53
Popularity
#303,172
Rating
4.0
Reviews
7
ISBNs
8

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