Author: Bruce Machart
Why I Read It: I had seen the cover and each time it drew me in just a little bit further until it finally found its way home with me.
First Line: "The
blood had come hard from her, so much of it that, when Vaclav Skala awoke in
wet bed linens to find her curled up against him on her side, moaning and
glazed with sweat, rosary beads twisted around her clenched fingers, he smiled
at the thought that she'd finally broken her water."
First Impression:
Huh. I am surprised how appropriate this cover art is.
Last Impression: A
subdued tale of a young man's struggle with his father and brothers ends up
instead as a narrative of the power of women in their lives.
Overall - 3 Resting Heart Rate
How Much I Liked It - 3 It was different than most of the novels I normally read and that was refreshing, but it didn't leave a strong impression on me.
Characters - 4 The characters were all dynamic and addicting, even when their actions
were frustrating. No, especially when
they were frustrating.
Story - 3 It was a unique place
and idea, but instead of taking advantage of this uniqueness it just moseyed
along.
Narration - 3 The narration was
inconsistent; moments of poetry would fade into mundane narration but overall a
pleasant experience.
Read Again?
Absolutely. It was a quiet, peaceful read and I will be back when I miss that
feeling.
Tell Others to Read?
Perhaps if I know they appreciate literature or westerns. Otherwise this book
could require a bit much of its readers, since the action is quiet and the
timeline unstable.
Excerpt: Then, what
has only just bloomed within him curls brittle and brown at the edges, and he
believes now, in the slow seconds of understanding, ephemeral as they ever are,
that what lies behind a man in the expanding landscape of his past can never be
left behind entirely, that even the blazing, cotton-flecked fields of the summer
can't sweat from him the hard, fallow crust of so many winters. he can almost
put it into words, but it's fleet and then it's gone, and all that's left is
the caustic certainty that there's no moving forward unbridled, that the
weather-checked harness will never give, that the weight of all that is
dragging behind will know no abatement.
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