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Deborah Henry

Auteur de The Whipping Club

4 oeuvres 87 utilisateurs 15 critiques

Œuvres de Deborah Henry

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Nom canonique
Henry, Deborah
Sexe
female

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This collection of 365 daily devotions includes favorite, insightful devotions gleaned from My Devotions magazines published in the past 50 years. Each devotion includes a suggested scripture reading, an engaging story and a short prayer, and includes the year the devotion was originally published. This format draws children closer to Jesus as they learn more about His love and grace.
 
Signalé
StarBethlehem | Jul 26, 2023 |
A girl who found herself pregnant and unmarried had few options in 1950s Ireland, even if the father is someone she loves and plans to marry. In The Whipping Club by Deborah Henry, Marian is determined to do just that, despite one big potential obstacle: her lover is Jewish, not Catholic. Her first meeting with her potential in-laws does not go well; so much so that she decides not to tell Ben that she is pregnant and instead allows her priest uncle to spirit her away to a convent where the nuns (barely) care of the girls until they give birth.

The baby boy being given away, Marian returns home where she does marry her Jewish Ben after all, and they have another child, a girl. Their marriage is troubled in part by the secret Marian is keeping, and eventually, when she learns that the boy was not adopted but rather sent to a notorious orphanage, she begins her quest to bring him back to the family. The horrors he has seen in his first 12 years make it difficult for him to adapt to living in a normal family, and trouble ensues.

This book showed a lot of promise in its setup and its characters, but it's not particularly well developed. The first half, in particular, suffers from a meandering point of view that makes it difficult to tell whose thoughts we are meant to be following. A paragraph might start with Marian's thoughts and end with Ben's, or so it seemed. The scene shifts from place to place with a startling abruptness at times, and things are revealed in an oblique way that makes you think you will learn more about them later but you never do.

A lot of these problems clear up in the second part of the book, when the boy gets sent to a sort of horrific reform school where he suffers a great deal under the hands of the Christian Brothers who run it, but by then the reader is exasperated both with the characters and the writing. Three-fourths of the way through, the tone suddenly shifts to suspense in a book that had little to that point, and the ending seems unsatisfying and unfinished.

The Whipping Club is difficult at times to read because of the abuse the children face, and at other times because it's simply not written well. None of the characters are particularly likable, and while we are given endless passages inside their minds and thoughts, I still had difficulty understanding why either Marian or Ben chose to ever get married or stay married. In short, not a book I'd recommend in its current form.
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½
 
Signalé
rosalita | 13 autres critiques | Nov 8, 2022 |
What a powerful, amazing story! When I finished it this morning I was emotionally drained and wanting to know "what happened next".
The beginning of the novel did not prepare me for the complexity of the plot and the masterful story telling that was to follow.
Just one terrific book!!

jottingswithjasmine.wordpress.com
 
Signalé
Iambookish | 13 autres critiques | Dec 14, 2016 |
The Whipping Club by Deborah Henry follows Ben and Marian, a mixed couple of Jewish and Catholic backgrounds, their daughter Johanna, and their son, Adrian, who Marian gave up for adoption ten years earlier. Set in Ireland, the first chapter opens in 1957, but the novel is primarily set ten years later, 1967 and on. Finding herself pregnant before they married, Marian gives up Adrian, the couples first child, after staying in a Catholic home for unwed mothers. She and Ben marry later, and have their daughter, Johanna, but Marian is rife with guilt over giving up their son. Then she learns that Adrian was never adopted but was, instead, given over to an orphanage.

Marian tells Ben her secret, discovering that he already knew it, and the couple set out to find and then add their son back into their family. This struggle then illuminates the injustice and abuse orphans and unwanted children suffered at the hands of the Catholic run system in Ireland. At the same time their daughter Johanna is also facing religious intolerance based on her parentage.

The Whipping Club is a melancholy, bleak page turner. We experience Marian's (unnamed) depression, the brutality in the orphanages, the uncertainty that there is a satisfactory conclusion to the myriad of hopeless situations present. Henry is an adept writer and she does a good job with character development, even when several major characters were not very appealing. The story did keep my interest right up to the end. The descriptions of the brutal treatment of the children at the orphanages is horrific.

I did have a few qualms about the novel. First, while The Whipping Club is well written, the actual dialogue didn't fully convey the emotional upheavals the characters are experiencing. My biggest hesitation about the novel was that, as I was reading, the first part of the novel seemingly was heading one way and then diverged to another direction. While this could be describing an intriguing plot development shift, unfortunately in this case it feels more like the intent became obscured by a switch of focus and some clarity of purpose was lost.

Perhaps my reservations about the novel could be answered by integrating all the characters right from the beginning and weaving their stories together toward a final conclusion. That might have required rewriting the entire novel, a daunting prospect for a novel that really is not badly written to begin with.

So, in the end, I enjoyed reading The Whipping Club but I am feeling a dichotomy over rating it. It is a very well written novel and I've been known to rate based on writing ability. I've also been known to rate based on exciting plots in spite of the writing. Here we have skillful writing but the main storyline of the novel felt like it loss it's original focus and changed direction to a different focus - but different isn't always bad.

I've decided to Highly Recommended The Whipping Club, for a first novel, and watch for promising future novels by Henry.

Disclosure: I received an advanced reading copy of this book from the publisher and TLC for review purposes.
http://tlcbooktours.com

http://shetreadssoftly.blogspot.com/
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Signalé
SheTreadsSoftly | 13 autres critiques | Mar 21, 2016 |

Statistiques

Œuvres
4
Membres
87
Popularité
#211,168
Évaluation
½ 3.4
Critiques
15
ISBN
6

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