Saturday, September 13, 2008

BOOK REVIEW: "The Lace Reader" by Brunonia Barry

The Lace Reader

Synopsis:

In Barry's captivating debut, Towner Whitney, a young woman descended from a long line of mind readers and fortune tellers, has returned to her hometown of Salem, Massachusetts, for rest and relaxation. Any tranquility in her life is short-lived, however, when her aunt drowns under mysterious circumstances.


Take a trip to the the still point at the center of the lace. Take a trip with Sophya (or Towner) Whitney as she travels back home to Salem, Massachusetts and her troubled family when her Great Aunt Eva disappears. It’s a trip in time and space and thought. For the women of the Whitney family are all . . . different, perhaps disturbed, perhaps strangely psychic. Watch as you slowly understand what happened years ago, and see the picture emerge.

This is a tale of the victory of the human spirit over adversity, of coping with difficult and horrifying realities. Ultimately it is a tale of love, the love one family shares. It is filled with wonderful and strange characters --- witches, abused women, the Red Hat ladies, a has-been policeman, the Whitney family, born-again Christians, wild dogs, and Towner. It weaves back and forth through time and memory forming an intricate lace pattern of its own. We are drawn into that pattern and read it more with each page.

The author, Brunonia Barry, lives in Salem, and the love she has for her hometown shines through. Both the Salem of today and yesterday and its troubled history are drawn with an amazing sense of time and place. This story could not have been as real set in any other place. The language and voice border on poetic, while the story is stark and frequently frightening as the pattern slowly emerges and you find yourself bemused and wanting to know more. I read it slowly because I really wanted to devour it, but sensed that it was deeper than a fast read should be. It was worth savoring. I spent a time living with the characters and am still haunted by the beauty I found in the pages of this book.

A GREAT read.


--Mary Cremen
imagineatrium.com



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Experience the mystery of The Lace Reader online here.

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