Fotografía de autor

Holly Christine

Autor de Tuesday Tells it Slant

3 Obras 15 Miembros 3 Reseñas

Obras de Holly Christine

Tuesday Tells it Slant (2010) 8 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Todavía no hay datos sobre este autor en el Conocimiento Común. Puedes ayudar.

Miembros

Reseñas

Every so often you stumble upon a book, by chance, which is just a little bit different then the rest. A book in which the author presents his/herself with a unique style where no other writer has yet ventured to go before - uncharted territory. Holly Christine's "Tuesday Tells it Slant" is one of those types of books. Its strangely hypnotic power begins with the first line, "Isn't it funny how we sometimes forget the things we thought we'd never lose?". As the reader negotiates through the book, the storyline appears, random, chaotic and maybe even difficult to follow at times, especially tracking dates, but those who stick with it and don't give up, will eventually be rewarded. About halfway through the book the reader will have an "A-HA" moment where the author amazingly ties it all together and it suddenly all begins to make perfect sense. Definitely worth taking the time to puzzle through!… (más)
 
Denunciada
sgcallaway1994 | otra reseña | Oct 4, 2010 |
The storyline was unique. On the surface, it may sound like an overly religious book, since it involved heaven, angels and God. However, I was pleasantly surprised, this was NOT the case. I was disappointed many of the situations Clemenza encountered in her nine lives were somewhat unrealistic. Each life she had extreme circumstances to overcome or she became overly obsessive about something, not the way a regular person would act or a life a normal human may lead. It appeared she was always getting dealt the "short straw", so to speak. I did enjoy how the story came together in the end showing how each of her nine lives related to each other. How peculiar, her lives as humans were the ones she made some of her worst choices and her life as a dog was what I considered her best, hmm is the author trying to tell us something, here?… (más)
 
Denunciada
sgcallaway1994 | Oct 4, 2010 |
Who among us doesn't have a moment or two in our past that we wish we could change? Perhaps a moment where we were unnecessarily unkind or made the wrong choice. Or perhaps a time when we were bullied or overlooked. Short of a movie like Groundhog Day though, this is completely unrealistic. But what if you could take an old diary and re-write your life, re-write it to the point that it changes your current life? If your past experiences are suddenly different, how are you a different person in the present?

Tuesday Tells It Slant takes this very premise. Tuesday Morning is a book reviewer for an up and coming literary magazine when her boss has finally had it with her inability to come to work on time. Unemployed and barely hanging on emotionally, she manages to find a job at a local bookstore where she unexpectedly bumps into childhood friend and former boyfriend, Billy. With Billy's re-appearance in Tuesday's life, her forgotten and discarded past is about to have a shocking meeting with her present.

Told through a series of flashbacks, old (and newly created) diary entries, and scenes from the present, the reader is taken along as Tuesday orchestrates the past she wants to have lived, perhaps losing the person she was meant to be in the present. Besides Billy, other characters spiral through Tuesday's narration (the whole story is from her point of view): her twin sister Monday, her best frenemy Katie, and her parents Mitch and Miranda. Several of Emily Dickinson's poems are also used in the novel, both to explain Tuesday's inspiration and to foreshadow the coming revelations.

Unfortunately, the narrative time jumps, although prefaced by dates, were terribly confusing to me as a reader. I suspect that this is because there seem to be three or four main times to keep straight and a couple of them are not so far removed in time as to be immediately and obviously different from each other. I kept having to check back to see when it was in time that I was reading about. Also, it takes a fairly long while before it becomes obvious which of Tuesday's diary entries are original and which are rewrites (and perhaps I never did get them straight). I suspect that Christine was trying to play around with non-traditional narrative structure but it ended up being too jumbled to easily follow.

The characters, aside from Tuesday, were lightly sketched so their portrayals really only explained more of who Tuesday was than them being full characters in their own rights. And somehow I expected the re-writing of the past to be very different than it was, perhaps wanting more a touch of magical realism than the pragmatic explanation given. Although, when the reason for Tuesday's desire to rewrite the past is finally made clear, I certainly had more sympathy for the lengths to which she went to truly believe in her created past. Over all, while the book had an intriguing premise, in the end it didn't work for me. For alternative views, check out some of the amazon reviewers who connected to this better than I did.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
whitreidtan | otra reseña | Jul 13, 2010 |

Estadísticas

Obras
3
Miembros
15
Popularidad
#708,120
Valoración
3.8
Reseñas
3
ISBNs
4