Author picture

Works by Lesley Dormen

Associated Works

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
female

Members

Reviews

4 reviews
This collection of short stories sharing one narrator was at once insightful and impenetrable. Dormen follows her narrator, Grace Hanford, through her young life and into late middle age. While the occasional baffling run-on sentence or awkward metaphor describing something by comparing it to something even more obscure serve to unnecessarily complicate the narrative, Dormen’s surprising insight into one woman’s life experience is often strikingly and universally applicable. More than show more once, I found myself struck by her insight and able to relate to it completely, whether she was referring to talking to her college friends in code, admitting to a constant feeling of terror that needs to be masked, or describing arriving at that place between regret of the past and fear of the future that is, indeed, "the best place to be." show less
Leslie Dormen used a fascinating format for “The Best Place To Be,” one I have never before seen. She calls this format, ‘a novel in stories,’ and, as you might guess, it is a cross between a novel and a series of short stories. Essentially, Dormen took different scenes from the life of her character, Grace Hanford - scenes from childhood to middle age - and put them in the order that best expressed the story she wanted to tell, instead of chronological order. It was a fascinating show more format, one that could be quite successful and that I think Dormen did well.

However, I unfortunately felt a bit ‘blah’ about the character, Grace. I found myself unable to relate to Grace at all. I didn’t agree with many of her priorities or decisions, but I also wasn’t able to commiserate with why she may have made them anyway. This book is more for the 40 year-old stunningly single sophisticate than the happily newly married.
show less
½
I really liked the concept of a "novel in stories," and I enjoyed the format of this book, but I found the main character Grace a bit too neurotic and hard to relate to. The non-linear structure of the book serves the author's purpose well, and these stories are interesting and readable enough, but nothing really stood out about them.
½

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
2
Also by
3
Members
49
Popularity
#320,874
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
3
ISBNs
5
Languages
1