Fotografía de autor

Myfanwy Jones

Autor de Parlour Games for Modern Families

3+ Obras 85 Miembros 6 Reseñas

Obras de Myfanwy Jones

Leap (2015) 35 copias
The Rainy Season (2009) 11 copias

Obras relacionadas

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Miembros

Reseñas

Read this on the plane flying to vietnam. It was a great plane read , keeping me interested in the story. I enjoyed it and left it in the book exchange in Hoi An.
 
Denunciada
pruthomas | otra reseña | Dec 14, 2021 |
the cover says "a novel about love and grief and everything in between" .... and tigers... and parkour. I liked that it was set in Brunswick and Melbourne zoo with some outings to Lakes Entrance. The writing was simple and engaging, building the back story slowly, the concepts, more complex; a young unexpected death, the mother's grief, the boyfriends grief, each taking quite a different course. Ending without a conclusion, leaving the next steps of Joe meeting up with Elise to our imagination.
 
Denunciada
siri51 | 3 reseñas más. | Jan 27, 2017 |
A lovely, sad book about grief and recovery, obsession and friendship. I'm a sucker for books set in and around the inner north of Melbourne, so I was always likely to be sympathetic to Leap, but Jones has done a wonderful job of drawing out her characters - particularly the three young men. I wasn't entirely convinced by the intersection of the two threads of the story, but the stories worked really beautifully on their own.
 
Denunciada
mjlivi | 3 reseñas más. | Feb 2, 2016 |
Leap by Myfanwy Jones is a sharply observed story of grief and guilt and the struggle to move on from loss.

Three years after the tragic death of his girlfriend, Joe is still wallowing in guilt. Unable to re-imagine his future without her, he simply aims to stay busy, working two dead end jobs, and running through the darkened streets of Melbourne, leaping any obstacles in his way.
Elsewhere, Elise’s marriage is falling apart and her work is uninspiring, mournful and lonely, she is drawn to the beauty and violence of the tigers housed at the Melbourne Zoo.

In Leap, Jones has created two very different characters deeply affected by their respective losses, angry, heart broken and plagued by inertia they are unable to move forward with their own lives.

So Joe is challenged by the slow return of his desire for life. Moving on feels like a betrayal, but his punishing routine of parkour and work is no longer as satisfying as it once was given his attraction to his newest housemate, an enigmatic nurse. He is further challenged by the charm of his blue-eyed workmate, the ailing health of his Uncle and the needs of the young troubled teen he mentors.

Meanwhile the listlessness pressing on Elise is finally pierced when her husband announces he is leaving her. She escapes, not unhappily, to the home of her best friend for a few weeks and on her return home immerses herself in her obsession with the tigers at the zoo, enjoying being unaccountable to anyone but herself. Alone, she is finally able to confront her resentment and grief, to mourn her lost daughter on her own terms.

While I struggled a little with the narrative initially, which is shared between the two characters and moves between the past and present, I soon settled into the rhythm of the story. The emotion is powerful, yet the story is not without humour. The prose is thoughtful and genuine.

Well written, Leap is a moving novel.

“And maybe no trick he pulls off is ever going to bring her back but this one-it’s for her. He is going to make a perfect landing.
Breathes: One. Two. Three. Four. Five. Leaps”
… (más)
 
Denunciada
shelleyraec | 3 reseñas más. | Jun 8, 2015 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
3
También por
1
Miembros
85
Popularidad
#214,931
Valoración
3.8
Reseñas
6
ISBNs
13

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