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I'm almost shocked that this book is to be found in the children's section of a bookstore, it seemed to me to be a bit too grown up for children. But that's ok. With what many will view as lesbian themes, or at the very least feminist themes, letting children read literature that accepts such normally taboo or looked-down upon concepts might just inadvertantly teach them tolerance and acceptance. That's definitely a good thing, and I know from experience that what a child reads is more than a little influential in her life.
The sum of it is, this book is superbly written with finely, finely crafted stories, and I highly recommend it to everyone.
There's more and more wonderful lesbian fiction out there, but in the plethora of murder mysteries and everyday romances, sometimes the soul hungers for mythic characters. I love this book because it connects me with the awesome experience of passionate self-discovery. There is a moment when you begin to find who you are when the heavens seem to reverberate, but the sound is so soft that you only hear it with your heart. I can only sit back in wonder as Ms Donoghue articulates it so well. My hat is more than off to her...I'm willing to learn a full court bow!
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It's an interesting idea, and the actual writing is flowing and poetic, however, the majority of these stories ultimately disappointed me. Sometimes it's because her stories are a little too obvious, as with the title story. If you are going to write about a woman who is reported to have given birth to rabbits, and you want to give a logical explanation, a scam is about the only explanation you can come up with. THe only room for creativity is in why these folks decided to try it and how they came up with it, both of which I found to lack much depth.
The greatest shortcoming, however, was in the length of the stories. When the main purpose is to develop a character behind a bit of news, it requires far more words. THese stories were more on the order of short shorts. Yet because they were based on actual events, the surprise endings and plot turns required to make a short short work, are not here. Therefore the reader is ultimately left unsatisfied and wondering why the story needed to be written in the first place.
Oddly enough, the only story that appealed to me was the last one, Looking for Petronella. This story was quite a bit longer than the others and had more depth. The plot was also a lot more creative. It was almost as though the author needed to build her momentum to reach this point.
All in all this is not a bad read, but nothing I need to keep on my bookshelf.
Some stories just slid quietly by - making a small statement. But they were balanced by the ones that hit me between the eyes: Dido, How a Lady Dies, Words for Things, Ballad.
Some particular passages...
From "Ballad" - the tale of the young man who brought the plague to the two women he loved the most - "He wonders what it must be like to have a friend so long that you cannot remember a time before; to be woven together from the root."
From "How a Lady Dies" - I think this was my favorite story in the book. The sad, aching to be that person that cares so much for someone else and has the dignity to not cross the line. Or to be the other person, know that you're cared for so much but you are not able to give back that care - coupled with watching this person wasting away and being able to offer nothing more than a hand to hold and a smile. *sniffle*
"The voice of love is a noose. It keeps you dangling between two worlds."
"The only thing one can do in Bath that one did not do the day before is die."
"The doctors think a young lady of fortune must have everything to live for. ... Miss Pennington thanks them all and pays their fees without a murmur. She is coming to realise how very rich she is. If she was only a pauper, this dying would have been over with a long time ago."
"It occurs to her that she died some weeks ago and never noticed."
"No, Elizabeth has written nothing worth marble. Her verses are thin leaden things. Nothing to leave behind her, then. Only a share in a much-divided heart."
Read this book, ya hear?
Readers interested in historical oddities will enjoy the very similarly titled book The Girl Who Gave Birth to Rabbits by Cliff Pickover. Pickover's book both shocks and delights.
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Cara was away in Greece with some lesbian friends when she was killed in a car accident. Pen is living in the house of Cara's father.
Pen and Cara have been lovers since their Catholic schoolgirl days at Immaculate, and Pen is now a 5th grade teacher at Immac--as it is called by its former students. While their relationship was the grand passion of their lives, we learn that it was riddled with infidelities, and separations.
Cara was becoming very out, while Pen remained very closeted. Also flavoring the story is the fact Cara's older sister, Kate, was actually Pen's first crush, and Kate has now returned from America for Cara's funeral. The book is well-written. Definitely not a fluff piece.
The title refers to all the "hoods" that are a part of Pen's life--girlhood, womanhood, spinsterhood, and now widowhood.
In dealing with her grief and pain of recollection of Cara's affairs, Pen thinks about the many hoods we all wear. "Dykehood was definitely a baseball cap," she thinks to herself as she dons the hood of widow's weeds.
And Pen must also deal with Kate, Cara's sister, who returns from the U.S. after an absence of 14 years. Kate, with whom Pen was first infatuated when the 3 were in school together.
A beautifully wrought book. Warning: explicit lesbian sex.
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Beyond it's believable plot, Slammerkin is well paced and skillfully written. Definitely a book worth reading.
From a ribbon, a rape, and the selling of a body and soul, Slammerkin is more than the story of a prostitute. It is the story of seeking self-freedom and liberty. It is about the choices that we make and their life-long impact.
Mary Saunders, a young girl of fifteen, attempted to leave the trade. She conspired and found a family, one she thought she would not love, she was wrong. Here is where Mary's story begins and the slow destruction that was to follow in Mary's path.
Slammerkin is a novel to savour and share. It is both lively and horrific. I would highly recommend Slammerkin.
knowledge, on that one long night all the hope was pressed out of her life. The next day her tiny boy was put in a coffin no bigger than a hatbox, and her husband, blind with gin, called her terrible names and stumbled out into the lane. After three days she knew he was never coming back, no matter how long she waited." Reduced to beggary, Nance finds work for the breasts still filled with her son's milk. Forced into service, she becomes religious, bitter, cold. "But when the moonlight came in the shutters, on nights like this one, Nance Ash couldn't help thinking of how she'd had her single chance and lost it as easy as a leaf might be blown from a tree, simply because she'd slept sound one night seventeen years ago this January, dreaming of God alone knew what. She'd never slept right through a night since. She just wished, now, she could remember what she'd been dreaming of, all those years ago: what was it that had been so sweet she hadn't wanted to wake?"
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The strongest stories reside in rooms 101 and 106, which contain stories that revolve around marital infidelity, but have gentle reversals. Room 104 also concerns infidelity, but in this case, to God-and is much less interesting. Rooms 102, 103, 105 and the penthouse all contain guests coming from abroad and their stories all revolve around encounters with their past. Room 105, which concerns a mother meeting her son for the first time is perhaps the best of them, although the penthouse story is worth reading for the ending if nothing else. One sort of odd running thread is the clumsy mocking of Americans that appears in each story, which is in contrast the generally gentle tone of the collection. All in the all, the collection is inoffensive, but not quite as strong as the original Finbar's Hotel.
The book is a set of short stories that have inter-connecting characters in the stories. Each chapter was written by a different author, and I had fun trying to figure out who wrote which chapter. The story itself was light and fun, but not as much as I had hoped.
I enjoyed reading Ladies Night at Finbar's hotel, and would highly recommend it as a vacation or beach read. Nothing too deep to get lost in.