Photo de l'auteur

Joanne Proulx

Auteur de Anthem of a Reluctant Prophet

2 oeuvres 226 utilisateurs 12 critiques 2 Favoris

Œuvres de Joanne Proulx

Anthem of a Reluctant Prophet (2007) 133 exemplaires
We All Love the Beautiful Girls (2017) 93 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1964-06-24
Sexe
female
Nationalité
Canada
Lieux de résidence
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

Membres

Critiques

i really wanted this to be good. i really did. and now i wonder why. why did i want it to be good? because it had a cool cover? because it had a sufficiently creepy premise? probably the cover.

what i found, instead of a good book, was overdone teenage macho crafted by a woman of indeterminate age who apparently thinks all 17-year old boys are assholes who will listen to anything.

is it authentic to talk constantly about tits and dope and offer no redeeming character at all? it may be, but i lived through my own teenage years in total fear of creatures that looked, from the outside, just like this one, so i don't find him endearing or fully-created. i find him over the top in a way that makes my skin crawl.

this book meanders and wanders, promising some sort of direction only to take it away again. the protagonist realizes he has a creepy power, which strikes a few times in a row and then disappears for vast numbers of pages while he goes to see the red hot chili peppers (who cares?)and hits on his dead friend's girlfriend. there is a mysterious uncle held over our head, who fails to really materialize, or mean anything. the realization at the end, the supposed enlightenment of who your friends really are and how you should take care of them, is too long coming and, frankly, incredibly flat.

if i hadn't been sick when i read this, i would probably have thrown it against the wall and gone outside to let the fog wash clean my brain. instead i finished the damn thing and then threw it against the wall and then tried to sleep. to no avail. sigh.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
J.Flux | 5 autres critiques | Aug 13, 2022 |
Well. I feel cheated - both during the time it took to read the book, which, admittedly was less than a day, but especially after finishing it. Let me try and explain why. As a reviewer, I try never to read reviews until after I wrote mine, and maybe not even then. In the case of We All Love the Beautiful Girls, I didn't read a single review. What I did read was the effusive quotes on the back cover of the hardcover book. There were seven quotes. Effusive. Made me wonder why I let the ARC of this book sit on my shelves for several months. Oh, I read a lot. Every day However, there is only so much time.

Well, I picked up the book - along with a reviewer friend - for review this weekend. I was really excited after reading the quotes from other authors and a couple of publications. To say the last, the quotes and the hype in no way measured up to my take on the book.

Let me start with a summary and then I will write up my actual review thoughts.

It is a very, very bad time for Mia and Michael Slate. While they are reeling from the lost of Michael's company and their life savings, they discover that after their seventeen-year-old son went to a party, while high, he fell and passed out in the snow. This was a devastating event that toppled the already crumbling lives of their family. Sadly, more than the Slate family were affected by what happened to their son Finn.

Michael and Mia led a fairly charmed life. They both had exceptional jobs, had been married 19 years and had a relatively happy family. Things changed overnight. They lost everything, nearly lost Finn due to his trauma, and their family fell apart. Michael lost his company when his best friend Peter cheated him out of everything due to embezzlement. What Finn lost during that snowstorm was very tragic. He lost his hand, but truly, he lost himself. To complicate matters, Peter's daughter Frankie, at 23, is in love with Finn, but there is a young man Eli in love with her. Then Michael's wife Mia lost it all when she wondered about the stability of her marriage.

The overwhelming sense of drama after losing their livelihood quickly took second place and Finn's loss of his hand left Mia trying to keep things together, while Michael completely lost his way. Michael spent about 98% of the time during this book feeling sorry for himself. Yes, Mia did as well, but for different reasons. While Michael spent his time away from Mia and Finn, Mia used this time to play around with a fantasy. Giving in to said fantasy would no doubt completely erode any chance the family had of recovering.

When I read a book, admittedly I like to latch on to at least one character, preferably several. In this book, I was not afforded the opportunity. There is Michael, Mia, Finn and Frankie. NONE of them were likable. They were all broken and I could only hope through the pages of this book that at least one of them would be redeemed. Had that been the case, then my rating would have climbed up just a bit.

So, think. Imagine. You are on a train barreling downhill with no breaks. On the wrong track! Yep, that is what this book was. As I rapidly approached the epilogue I was so very hopeful that something, even one thing, would turn around. It never did.

Despite my overwhelming negative feelings towards this read, I will say that Joanne Proulx is a good storyteller, her writing was cohesive and I was initially drawn to the characters, especially Finn. What he dealt with I couldn't imagine my own children suffering through.

Many thanks to Grand Central Publishing for this ARC to review in exchange for my honest opinion.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
RobinLovesReading | 5 autres critiques | Oct 25, 2019 |
We All Love The Beautiful Girls
By
Joanne Prouix

What it's all about...

Finn is found by his father at a friend’s house...nearly dead in the snow. The resulting injuries are devastating as well as life changing.

Why I wanted to read it...

Complicated flawed characters have an immediate appeal for me. Finn and family are a mess. This mess only gets worse before it becomes reasonably livable.

What made me truly enjoy this book...

Although this wasn’t a book filled with puppies and kittens...it was one that made me think about the way a deeply flawed family has to learn to exist after a tragedy.

Why you should read it, too...

Readers who have an appeal for dysfunctional characters...should enjoy this deeply dark book.

I received an advance reader’s copy of this book from the publisher through NetGalley and Amazon. It was my choice to read it and review it.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
PattyLouise | 5 autres critiques | Oct 8, 2018 |
An excellent debut novel that once I opened up the book I read it straight through! A story about what ifs...which you won't know until the end and they are
heart breaking to read. A very happy family that considers themselves lucky to have so much; a wonderful marriage, a perfect son, jobs they love and
great friends. Well, as you can guess, it can only go downhill from there. I don't want to give anything away, but this author has done a great job on her
first novel. Definitely someone to watch!… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Dianekeenoy | 5 autres critiques | Sep 11, 2018 |

Prix et récompenses

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi

Auteurs associés

Jennifer Griffiths Cover designer

Statistiques

Œuvres
2
Membres
226
Popularité
#99,470
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
12
ISBN
23
Langues
1
Favoris
2

Tableaux et graphiques