Light from a Distant Star
A Novel
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
August 1, 2011
In her latest, Morris (Songs in Ordinary Time) offers a timeless and timely look at small town life, as seen by wise, verbose, and intensely naïve thirteen-year-old heroine Nellie Peck. Set in the town of Springvale during the summer before Nellie begins middle school, Morris ably juggles compelling storylines and characters. The Peck family faces financial ruin: Nellie's father, busy writing a history of their town, neglects his hardware store, but refuses to sell it; her mother takes in a boarder, stripper Dolly Bedelia, to help pay the bills. Bucky Saltonstall, a new boy in town, turns out to be a cruel liar and a thief. Nellie's junkyard-owning grandfather, Charlie, has hired an ex-convict handyman, Max. When Dolly is found murdered in her apartment, suspicion quickly falls on Max, but Nellie knows that Dolly had been secretly seeing wealthy businessman Andy Cooper. No one believes Nellie's version; worse still, Cooper happens to be the potential buyer for her father's store. While supporting figures, like Nellie's father Benjamin, are well-developed, others, like Bucky and Charlie, remain one-dimensional. However, Morris' page-turner, (which evokes To Kill a Mockingbird) will satisfy her fans and send new readers searching for her earlier titles.
April 15, 2011
With her father's business in trouble and her mother now working, 13-year-old Nellie is the determined caretaker of her little brother. The adults she does encounter, like the stripper who rents an apartment at the back of the house, upend her life further. Then, a moment of violence lands Nellie in court as witness, where no one believes the awful truth she's trying to relay. As evidenced by her many novels, e.g., National Book Award nominee Vanished, Morris excels at family dramas with dark and tingly psychological twists, so I'm betting that this will be absorbingly good.
Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
September 1, 2011
Morris' eighth novel is both an engaging coming-of-age story and a dark tale of murder and its aftermath in a small, sleepy town. Nellie Peck is 13; it is summertime, and she is in charge of her younger brother. With the family's hardware business failing, Nellie's mother has returned to work at the local salon, and Nellie's father is more interested in writing a town history than making money. Two newcomers enter Nellie's life: Max, a taciturn drifter who works in her grandfather's junkyard, and Dolly, a brash young stripper who rents the apartment behind the Peck's house. When an act of violence occurs, Nellie knows some of the scandalous details surrounding the crime but also that no one will believe her accusations. Morris skillfully traces Nellie's gradual realization that reputations are not always what they seem and that the truth must come out no matter the cost.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)
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