Imagen del autor

Deborah Kay Davies

Autor de True Things About Me

6 Obras 203 Miembros 21 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Créditos de la imagen: Photograph: PR

Obras de Deborah Kay Davies

True Things About Me (2010) 93 copias
Déliquescence (2012) 1 copia
Jaká jsem (2011) 1 copia

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
female

Miembros

Reseñas

I don't know what I just read. Reasons She Goes to the Woods by Deborah Kay Davies is presented in a series of vignettes and is about a girl called Pearl. Each right hand page (in my copy) is a vignette from Pearl's young life, headlined by a brief chapter heading or title on the opposite page. This makes for a quick read, but the vignettes are heavy and force you to consider what's really going on.

Pearl is a troubled girl and I found myself wondering if she's a sociopath, psychopath or suffering from antisocial personality disorder. Perhaps she's just evil? The author's lyrical writing style put me immediately in mind of Sundial by Catriona Ward, in her ability to create an incredibly creepy young girl. When reviewing Sundial earlier this year, I wrote that it was a 'slow burn, disturbing and unsettling read with a hostile undercurrent' which readily applies here.

The prose in Reasons She Goes to the Woods is spellbinding, and Pearl's visits to the woods are full of evocative nature writing which did well to offset some of the tougher scenes. Meanwhile, there is a constant underlying feeling of menace and mounting dread about what Pearl will do next.

Some of Pearl's childhood antics are relatable, and I especially enjoyed the eating competition:

"I will choose two items of food for each of you, she explains, you have to eat them without throwing up. They all think this is a great idea, and start boasting to each other about how they are never, ever sick." Page 133

Pearl chooses a 'blob of corned beef and a teaspoon of cough medicine for Fee', while the kids load up the spoon for Pearl:

"Soon the big spoon is towering with, among other things, a soft sprout, peanut butter, a slick of Vick's rub, a prune and a crumbled stock cube." Page 133

I could totally relate to this game, although in my day it was a tablespoon of soy sauce, a tablespoon of Vegemite or a full glass of water. What fun!

Published in 2014 and going on to win various awards, Reasons She Goes to the Woods by Deborah Kay Davies is literary horror and while the writing is spectacular, I can't say I enjoyed reading it. The lack of dialogue punctuation and page-long paragraphs certainly irritated and Pearl is a sensual and disturbing character. Those who remember watching The Good Son (starring Macaulay Culkin) will be shocked to find Pearl is even worse.

I borrowed Reasons She Goes to the Woods by Deborah Kay Davies from the library and I'll be glad to send it down the return chute and on to the next reader intrigued by the sinister yet alluring blurb.
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Carpe_Librum | 3 reseñas más. | Jul 13, 2022 |
I really did expect more from this book. I read it in a few sittings and sadly I wasn't that impressed with it. To be honest, it was really quite disturbing...and I really don't think it was my cup of tea at all, which is a real shame as I thought it initially had some promise.
One of the laziest endings too.
It's a no from me.
1 vota
Denunciada
MandaTheStrange | 3 reseñas más. | Oct 7, 2020 |
This short novel is a treatise in the dangers of obsession and psychological trauma. The main character is nameless as is the town in which she lives. There are paragraph breaks but no quotation marks. The reader lives in this woman’s head with her, and any reasonable person is alternately disgusted by her and pitying her.

She becomes so immediately swept up with a man she knows nothing about who treats her like an object, an annoyance, a means to other ends. He disappears for weeks at a time, and she thinks about him constantly. She is sexually attracted to him and obsessed with getting him to love her. As time goes on, she is more and more willing to prostrate her body and her mind to his whims.

Eventually she loses everything - her friends, her parents, her job, her health, her money, even her furniture. Yet she still craves his attention and affection. It is sad and sick and frustrating. Both of them treat her without respect.

In the end, she decides her only way to be finished with him forever is to put an end to him.
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Carlie | 16 reseñas más. | Oct 11, 2019 |
There is no doubt that this is a triumph of format; in 124 vignettes Pearl grows from an odd infant being rather casually raised in a household touched by both poverty and insanity and just possibly a touch of sexual abuse, to a dangerous young woman. The years slip by seamlessly marked by the seasons or by rites of passage (Pearl goes to the beach, Pearl has her period) but Pearl remains fixed on one goal to the exclusion of everything else

So stylistically this works - but I am not sure that it does as a story. Its a long time since I have been either child or teenager, but the power Pearl appears to hold over her female friends and her gang is hard to understand. Surely, at some point someone realises that its more fun and eminently safer, to leave Pearl at home. At some point her adored, but obviously rather dopey father, would have discovered her stratagems against her mother. At some point, someone is calling family services

So its engagingly written, but more admirable for how its written than what it says
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Denunciada
Opinionated | 3 reseñas más. | Mar 17, 2018 |

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Obras
6
Miembros
203
Popularidad
#108,639
Valoración
½ 3.5
Reseñas
21
ISBNs
22
Idiomas
3

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