Showing posts with label love in its varied forms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label love in its varied forms. Show all posts

Thursday, January 28, 2016

The Versions of Us

The Versions of Us (advanced reader edition) by Laura Barnett, 402 pages

Eva and Jim are college students in 1958 when Jim witnesses Eva narrowly dodging a bicycle accident. That much we know. But how Jim and Eva respond to this chance meeting (with Jim helping Eva to her feet, with Eva scowling at him as she cycles away) changes the paths of their lives. The Versions of Us simultaneously tells the story of Eva and Jim in three versions: one where they meet, fall in love and marry right away; one where they run into one another at occasional events over the course of their lives spent with other people; and one where they start dating and then break up for reasons they can't control. It's kind of like that Gwyneth Paltrow movie from years back, Sliding Doors, except that we can't use the length of Eva's hair to help with the continuity of the story.

I'll be completely honest here: this was a really convoluted story. The characters are wonderful, multi-layered. The plots are all fascinating; any one of them would have made a great novel in its own right, had it been fleshed out a little bit more. But it's confusing. The review blurb on the advance reader edition's cover refers to this as a "choose-your-own adventure book in which you don't have to choose." If the criss-crossing storylines bother you, I'd recommend reading it like you would a choose-your-own-adventure story and following one path all the way through and then going back to read another path.

Thursday, August 27, 2015

Anna Karenina

Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy, 938 pages
This year's summer reading big-book, UCPL's fifth, and the first one that I finished before the third discussion. I have always claimed that I read this long ago, and I remembered much of the first half, but the second half of the book seems utterly unfamiliar. Sure, I knew the ending, and there's not much to Levin and Kitty's story that will stick with me for decades to come. Levin's religious awakening didn't seem to be as compelling as any of the long, novel length scenes earlier in the book: the reaping with the peasants, Vronsky and Anna's time in Italy, Stiva, Levin, and annoying friend out hunting. Those were all almost stories unto themselves.
Maybe the most readable of the five big books we have done, but it;s no War and Peace. 
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