segunda-feira, 23 de novembro de 2009

Body Surfing by Anita Shreve


Body Surfing by Anita Shreve

From Bess Newman, for About.com


Anita Shreve’s previous novels, including The Weight of Water and A Wedding in December have established her as an immensely successful writer— Oprah’ Book Club endorsement of The Pilot’s Wife didn’t hurt either. Her latest release, Body Surfing, is even more appealing than her previous works. This moving story of a young woman who bonds with the family she works for will engross readers thanks to Shreve’s skilled writing.

Pros

  • Lovely prose and a gripping, romantic tale make Body Surfing a page turner and a satisfying read.
  • Water imagery saturates the novel; a recurring theme in Shreve’s writings.
  • The plot takes turns that are unexpected and yet entirely believable.

Cons

  • Shreve writes with short, choppy sentences that break up the narrative passages.

Description

  • Sydney, a young widow, becomes a tutor for a family spending the summer at their beach house.
  • While tutoring the young daughter, Sydney also becomes involved with one of the sons.
  • Her own romantic history and the family’s lukewarm welcome further complicate the relationships.
  • 'Body Surfing' was released by Little, Brown in April 2007

Guide Review - 'Body Surfing' by Anita Shreve - Book Review

Body Surfing opens with an evocative description of a beach house and a woman swimming, surfing her body on the ocean’s waves. Anita Shreve’s latest novel picks up on previous themes she has explored—-love, loss, marriage, the ocean—-but the story of Sydney, a young woman who is lost, and finds herself the tutor to a teenage daughter at her family’s summer beach house, is unique and textured in its own right.

Sydney has a traumatic past: two marriages--one that ended in divorce and one that left her a widow. The family she lives with has their own troubles, including a youngest daughter who is "slow" and threatens to disappoint her parents’ high hopes that she go to college. These characters are presented in whole, complex portraits, and there’s a strong undercurrent of hope in the way they continue to embrace love and new relationships, despite their flaws.

Body Surfing is a slow-moving story that spans three summers, and yet manages to move quickly and deliberately as well. The beach house functions as a character itself, playing a large role in the story and providing the novel with an intoxicating air of summer vacations and sandy feet. Body Surfing would make a great beach book, but it’s also emotionally satisfying enough to stand up to anytime of year.

http://bestsellers.about.com/od/womenslitchicklit/gr/body_surfing.htm

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