Modern Gods
A Novel
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
April 24, 2017
Pulling from the real-life events of 1993, when a young supporter of the Ulster Freedom Fighters, a British loyalist paramilitary organization, shot up a small pub in Northern Ireland, Laird has written a truly superb novel exploring the possibilities and impossibilities of forgiveness. Protestant Kenneth and Judith Donnelly live in Ulster. They have three adult children: Liz has been living somewhat unhappily in the States after finishing her Ph.D. in anthropology; Allison has two small children and is planning to marry a mysterious local man whose background she hasn’t pushed to understand; and Spencer has a big secret of his own. Gathering at their parents’ house for Allison’s wedding, the family will have to confront the suddenly very personal echoes of the “troubles” of the past. Liz, meanwhile, will leave after the ceremony, on her own journey to a small island off the coast of Papua New Guinea, where she’ll be working on a BBC documentary. In a possibly heavy-handed move, Laird sends Liz to New Ulster, drawing a parallel between the two islands, thousands of miles apart, which seemingly share more than a name. “A lot of violence in these places,” Kenneth remarks, as Liz first announces her plans. “Where are ‘these places’?” Liz asks in turn, the very question Laird asks of himself and his readers. Though Liz’s experiences are salient, its Allison’s fate, thoroughly chilling and unsettling, that is the highlight.
In Laird's audiobook, two sisters from Northern Ireland experience life-changing upheaval simultaneously--on opposite ends of the globe. One is in Ulster, and the other in Papua New Guinea. Narrator Sarah-Jane Drummey adopts a slow, deliberate pace, and her Irish accent is pleasant to listen to as she describes Liz's venture to a Papua New Guinean island to explore a new religion led by a charismatic leader. At the same time, her sister, Alison, struggles in Ulster, where she discovers the truth about her new husband's past. Drummey also uses an accent for the Papua New Guinean characters, most strikingly for Belef, the religious leader whose deep and clearly enunciated words reinforce the gravity of her convictions. S.E.G. � AudioFile 2017, Portland, Maine
دیدگاه کاربران