Katherine Pancol
Author of The Yellow Eyes of Crocodiles
About the Author
Image credit: Georges Seguin
Series
Works by Katherine Pancol
L'Accordéon, marchand de bonheur - collection En Avant la Musique - livre enfant jeunesse (2019) 9 copies
Une aventure avec d'Artagnan 2 copies
Une aventure avec Tom Sawyer 2 copies
La trompette enrhumée 1 copy
Une aventure avec Mowgli 1 copy
Trilogia Animal: Los Ojos Amarillos De Los Cocodrilos, El Vals Le Ntode Las Tortugas, Las Ardillas... (2013) 1 copy
Η βάρβαρη 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Pancol, Katherine
- Legal name
- Pancol, Katherine
- Birthdate
- 1949-10-22
- Gender
- female
- Occupations
- Professeur de français
Professeur de latin - Nationality
- France
- Birthplace
- Casablanca, Maroc
- Places of residence
- Casablanca, Morocco (birthplace)
- Associated Place (for map)
- Casablanca, Maroc
Members
Reviews
The Yellow Eyes of Crocodiles begins when Josphine’s husband runs away with his mistress to run a crocodile farm in Kenya. He leaves shy, bookish Josephine short on money and confidence. Her much bolder sister Iris takes advantage by getting Josephine to write a book that will be published under Iris’s name while Josephine pockets the proceeds. Fortunately, in the aftermath of her husband’s departure, Josephine will begin to gain the courage to stand on her own.
The Yellow Eyes of show more Crocodiles describes a wide variety of romantic relationships. While that could lead to a book that was just fluffy drama, in Katherine Pancol’s hands it became an intelligent study of human nature. In the author interview at the back of the book, Pancol describes her belief that the plot of a book should flow directly from the characters’ fully imagined personalities. Her book embodied this philosophy, with a beautifully believable, character-driven plot. In that way, it reminded me very much of Someone Else’s Love Story. The author does a great job balancing the many plots her characters find themselves embroiled in. It wasn’t difficult to keep track of relationships and I cared how each and every story was going to play out.
The author’s ability to describe a scene was very impressive. In some books, enough details are shared that it becomes impossible to get an impression of the whole scene. Pancol does an incredible job selecting just the details that convey the character of a scene or a person. The initial scene of this book gave me one of the most vivid mental images I’ve ever gotten from a book. The few words kept in the original French added to the atmosphere. I also enjoyed the details to she chose to share about Josephine’s book writing process. It was just enough to give a general idea of the story and of how it related to Josephine’s life. I think the length of this book and the time it covered was also important for conveying Josephine’s character growth. She changes very gradually and believably. I couldn’t help rooting for her.
As someone who likes happy endings, I liked that things wrapped up with everyone I liked apparently going to get what they wanted. I would have liked a slightly more tied up ending though. For instance, a neighbor has a fascinating secret that’s never connected to the rest of the book. It’s also not entirely clear what’s going to happen next for some of the characters. Fortunately, there are two more books! Hopefully they’ll be translated too, because I can’t wait to find out what happens next.
This review first published on Doing Dewey. show less
The Yellow Eyes of show more Crocodiles describes a wide variety of romantic relationships. While that could lead to a book that was just fluffy drama, in Katherine Pancol’s hands it became an intelligent study of human nature. In the author interview at the back of the book, Pancol describes her belief that the plot of a book should flow directly from the characters’ fully imagined personalities. Her book embodied this philosophy, with a beautifully believable, character-driven plot. In that way, it reminded me very much of Someone Else’s Love Story. The author does a great job balancing the many plots her characters find themselves embroiled in. It wasn’t difficult to keep track of relationships and I cared how each and every story was going to play out.
The author’s ability to describe a scene was very impressive. In some books, enough details are shared that it becomes impossible to get an impression of the whole scene. Pancol does an incredible job selecting just the details that convey the character of a scene or a person. The initial scene of this book gave me one of the most vivid mental images I’ve ever gotten from a book. The few words kept in the original French added to the atmosphere. I also enjoyed the details to she chose to share about Josephine’s book writing process. It was just enough to give a general idea of the story and of how it related to Josephine’s life. I think the length of this book and the time it covered was also important for conveying Josephine’s character growth. She changes very gradually and believably. I couldn’t help rooting for her.
As someone who likes happy endings, I liked that things wrapped up with everyone I liked apparently going to get what they wanted. I would have liked a slightly more tied up ending though. For instance, a neighbor has a fascinating secret that’s never connected to the rest of the book. It’s also not entirely clear what’s going to happen next for some of the characters. Fortunately, there are two more books! Hopefully they’ll be translated too, because I can’t wait to find out what happens next.
This review first published on Doing Dewey. show less
Josephine's husband is not great and Iris (Josephine's sister) is incredibly self-centered. Both of these people use Josephine's kindness against her, but she eventually realizes that she's better than both of them.
I enjoyed the zany and varied cast of characters here. There were a lot of different story lines happening that all connected in some way (it was like reading Love Actually).
I definitely enjoyed...I mean I finished it and that seems to be quite a task for me lately. I'm curious to show more see if the other books in this series are published in the US because I want to know what happens to a couple of these characters. show less
I enjoyed the zany and varied cast of characters here. There were a lot of different story lines happening that all connected in some way (it was like reading Love Actually).
I definitely enjoyed...I mean I finished it and that seems to be quite a task for me lately. I'm curious to show more see if the other books in this series are published in the US because I want to know what happens to a couple of these characters. show less
Ya renombrada y conocida en toda Europa, Katherine Pancol, es la culpable de la serie de novelas, conocidas popularmente como "Trilogía Animal", sin otro significado que el título de las mismas, con un fin más comercial que literario propiamente dicho, dado que no tienen relación alguna (o tienen muy poca, casi insignificante) con el contenido de la novela así.
Se trata de unos libros gruesos, que me han acompañado durante casi dos meses de lectura, cuya historia gira entorno a un show more núcleo de personajes relacionados entre sí, en la que sus vidas se entrelazan y se enfrentan, en las situaciones cotidianas o surrealistas, en ocasionas hasta forzadas. La trama es atractiva, y la narración es muy cuidada y hermosa en la primera parte, sin embargo en las secuelas la calidad decae vertiginosamente, haciéndose sumamente repetitiva y aburrida, sin nada que innovar. Los personajes evolucionan a duras penas, volcándose en la misma actitud página tras página.
Recomiendo leer la primera parte, "Los ojos Amarillos de los Cocodrilos", por su remarcable calidad literaria. Las otras dos, no aportarán nada nuevo. show less
Se trata de unos libros gruesos, que me han acompañado durante casi dos meses de lectura, cuya historia gira entorno a un show more núcleo de personajes relacionados entre sí, en la que sus vidas se entrelazan y se enfrentan, en las situaciones cotidianas o surrealistas, en ocasionas hasta forzadas. La trama es atractiva, y la narración es muy cuidada y hermosa en la primera parte, sin embargo en las secuelas la calidad decae vertiginosamente, haciéndose sumamente repetitiva y aburrida, sin nada que innovar. Los personajes evolucionan a duras penas, volcándose en la misma actitud página tras página.
Recomiendo leer la primera parte, "Los ojos Amarillos de los Cocodrilos", por su remarcable calidad literaria. Las otras dos, no aportarán nada nuevo. show less
well... this one was much darker than The Yellow Eyes of Crocodiles. there was still some charm and quirk, but this was a bit of an odd and violent story. as in the first, some things fall by the wayside and never feel resolved or finished. there is supposed to be a next book in this 'josephine' series, so maybe some storylines will surface again? (though loose threads from book #1 were not picked up in book #2, so i'm not holding out a huge amount of hope.)
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Statistics
- Works
- 69
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 2,890
- Popularity
- #8,868
- Rating
- 3.2
- Reviews
- 102
- ISBNs
- 289
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