Second Nature
A Love Story
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
Harrowing situations and the characters embroiled in them are no strangers to Jacquelyn Mitchard's novels. Here, narrator Rebecca Lowman grasps the lead character's tenacity and courage throughout her moving performance. Sicily Coyne has lived with a severely disfigured face since she was 13, when her father, a firefighter, died in a fire at a school event. Twelve years later, Sicily decides to attempt a normal life by having revolutionary facial transplant surgery. Believe it or not, that's not the gist of the novel's engrossing drama. Sicily's restored beauty leads to new adventures and romance--and a life that becomes entangled in moral dilemmas and life-threatening crises. Lowman conveys the novel's building suspense with heart and deftly portrays the varying degrees of affirmation Sicily finds in those who support her. A.W. (c) AudioFile 2011, Portland, Maine
July 25, 2011
Mitchard's (The Deep End of the Ocean) fans are familiar with the Cappadoras, a family that has suffered the most improbable tragedies. This time out they enter the story through Sicily Coyne, a young woman who lost her face and her father in a tragic fire. Though her indomitable spirit (and the help of spitfire aunt Marie Caruso) has helped her recover, and even thrive, her world collapses again when she discovers that her fiancé was partially responsible for starting the fire and is with her only out of guilt. As their relationship ends, Sicily begins a transformation with Dr. Eliza Cappadora, who gives her a total face transplant, a radical procedure that photographer Beth Cappadora chronicles with her camera. Soon after, moody filmmaker Vincent Cappadora becomes Sicily's lover. But a passionate week in L.A. leaves Sicily pregnant and facing some serious choices. Compounding matters is Vincent's vacillation about their relationship and Sicily's difficulty in navigating a world where she's no longer perceived as a freak. Though readers unfamiliar with Mitchard's previous novels may not appreciate the connections to the Cappadoras, they will embrace Sicily, a strong and extremely empathic heroine whose disfigurement is made clear without being overdone. Though Mitchard's choice to move between tenses can confuse, this is a riveting tale.
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