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8 oeuvres 63 utilisateurs 2 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: Courtesy of Serpent's Tail Press

Œuvres de Pat MacEnulty

Time to Say Goodbye (2006) 16 exemplaires
From May to December (2007) 8 exemplaires
Sweet Fire (High Risk Books) (2003) 6 exemplaires
Picara (2009) 3 exemplaires
The Language of Sharks (2004) 3 exemplaires

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Sexe
female

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Critiques

I genuinely liked Trish in this fictional novel that reads like a memoir. Trish becomes addicted to heroin at a young age, and by the time she turns nineteen, she is in prison.

Trish's life is a difficult one. She grows up without a father, and always wonders who and where he is. Her mom is a composer and concert violinist, and travels all over the country. Trish is particularly close to her older brother. But when he leaves home, she is on her own. As Trish begins to come-of-age, she takes up with a different crowd, and happens to find the one thing that makes her life a little less painful....a sweet blissful escape....drugs.

I couldn't put this book down, and hated to do so when my lunch hour was up, or it was time to go to bed. Pat writes with her heart, and I believe that Sweet Fire is loosely based on her life, growing up in Jacksonville, FL.

I have one of her other novels waiting for me on my TBR shelf, and I can't wait to get started on it.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
missysbooknook | Jul 21, 2011 |
From May to December is a book that grew on me as I read it and lingered with me long after I was done. It is the story of women, all very different but very human women. Each one is fighting her own demons, some from within a physical prison, two from within their own personal prisons.

The sisters, Jen and Lotty, have never been close. As children Jen felt ignored, pushed aside by her sister's illnesses. Now, as adults, they come together again but the reemergence of Lotty's cancer will either strengthen or destroy their attempts at sisterhood. Jen has a past of which she is not proud but she is trying to create a new life for herself. When Lotty asks her to help with a prison writing program she has begun at a local women's prison, Jen hesitates but, with many doubts, agrees to help. Together they work with a group of women to write and produce a production of one act plays.

The book is also told in the alternating story of four women, each one in prison for a different crime. The strength of this book is its portrayal of these women, their pasts, their presents and their dreams of a future. MacEnulty gives a voice to the thousands of women incarcerated all over the nation. These women have broken the law but the stories behind the crimes are powerful and moving.

But this is not a book of weak women, desperation or lives at their end. Instead it is a book full of hope, of the strength and beginnings. There is strong emotion through out the book but it is not a sappy, mushy, 'poor pitiful us' emotion. Instead MacEnulty's strong writing ability brings it above the emotion to form a full bodied story that leaves a lasting impression. She is able to lead readers into the lives of her characters by slowing revealing their stories, unfolding the details one by one to open a panorama of survival and substance. She draws tears and cheers for her women through deft plotting and in depth character development, a triumph of heart blended with talent. A winning combination.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
FrontStreet | Mar 29, 2008 |

Statistiques

Œuvres
8
Membres
63
Popularité
#268,028
Évaluation
½ 4.4
Critiques
2
ISBN
11
Favoris
1

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