
Eleven Hours
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

Starred review from February 22, 2016
Early one wintry morning, Lore, an elementary school speech therapist who is nine-months pregnant, enters a
New York City hospital alone. Her contractions have started, and though she isn't terribly far along, her assigned nurse, Franckline, quickly sets her up in the maternity ward, where the duo ride out the long process of Lore's labor together.
As the hours pass, the women sit in Lore's room and walk the hospital halls, and snippets of their histories come to lightâincluding Franckline's time as a midwife's helper in
her native Haiti and Lore's difficult childhood, as well as
the complicated love triangle that resulted in her solo trip
to the hospital. In addition, it isn't long before Franckline's own early pregnancy is revealed. After several miscarriages, however, Franckline is afraid to tell her husband of her condition until she is certain her baby will survive. Written with incredible clarity, this third novel from Erens (The Virgins) is a wonder, shifting between two protagonists with ease to tell a deeply personal narrative of childbirth, complete with tension, horror, and deep, mature emotion. This novel does not sentimentalize the delivery of a child but rather examines the surpriseâmental and physicalâthat accompanies it. Labor stories are as old as time, but Erens's novel feels incredibly fresh and vivid. An outstanding accomplishment.

Starred review from March 1, 2016
An unflinching look at pregnancy and childbirth. Lore arrives at the hospital alone, carrying a single duffel bag and an extremely detailed birth plan. Franckline, the maternity nurse charged with her care, soon learns this this taciturn, prickly woman is no more enthusiastic about accepting help than she is about fetal monitoring or an IV. But Franckline knows when to recede and when to insist, and, as pain breaks down Lore's self-reliance, these two strangers form a bond that is singular in its intimacy and intensity. Erens' second book, The Virgins (2013), was a study in teenage sex and friendship and a critical favorite. Her debut novel, The Understory--first published in 2007 and rereleased in 2014--was a close look at the devastating power of loneliness. Erens excels at reading the entrails of dreadful experiences and messy relationships. Her exquisite prose is what keeps readers from turning away. In between contractions, Lore remembers her dead mother and her absent father. She alternately loathes and longs for her baby's father as she obsessively revisits scenes from their time together. When she's not tending Lore, Franckline's thoughts turn to her own pregnancy--so new that she hasn't even told her husband about it. These glimpses inside the minds and hearts of two women are richly rendered, but this novel's greatest achievement is its excruciatingly vivid depiction of what it is to grow and carry and deliver a child. Erens makes it clear that--at best--giving birth is an awful ordeal. And, by combining portraits of a woman at the beginning of her pregnancy and a woman on the brink of motherhood, Erens shows that there is not one moment between these two experiences without peril. Powerful--aesthetically and viscerally.
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