Fotografía de autor
15 Obras 309 Miembros 6 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

También incluye: Fiona Hill (1)

Series

Obras de Ellen Pall

Sweet's Folly (1977) 47 copias
The Country Gentleman (1987) 46 copias
The Stanbroke Girls (1981) 36 copias
The Autumn Rose (1978) 26 copias
The Love Child (1977) 19 copias
Back East (1983) 13 copias
Must Read Well: A Novel (2022) 8 copias
The Trellised Lane (1975) 8 copias
Love in a Major Key (1976) 7 copias
The Wedding Portrait (1975) 7 copias
Among the Ginzburgs (1996) 6 copias
The Practical Heart (1975) 5 copias
Fiona Hill Anthology (2014) 3 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Otros nombres
Hill, Fiona
Fecha de nacimiento
1952-03-28
Género
female
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugares de residencia
New York, New York, USA
Educación
University of Michigan
University of California, Santa Barbara (AB|1973)
Organizaciones
Fordham University
Premios y honores
Phi Beta Kappa

Miembros

Reseñas

I swear I will never believe another blurb that claims "acute psychological suspense." I think the last 3-4 books I picked up (with trepidation) that were described thus were most assuredly not what I would consider thrillers. This book is about Liz (or Beth), a stymied PhD candidate who chances into a circumstance that promises to help her get unstuck from a seemingly impossible situation. Her dissertation is all about the works of Anne Taussig Weil (I kept thinking it was Weir -- I could not keep it straight), who wrote a foundational second-wave feminist novel in the 1960s, then faded from public view. Despite Liz' best efforts, Weil has refused her the access, to her works and her mind, that Liz needs to complete her work. So, when Liz stumbles over an ad for a reader-slash-tenant for none other than Weil, she obfuscates her identity and becomes Beth, and secures the spot. It turns out the assignment is to read aloud Anne's journals from a period in her life she wishes to remember as she slowly succumbs to illness. I suppose the "suspense" the reviewers allude to is the subterfuge that Beth employs, to attain illicitly what was not freely given. But, aside from some apprehension on Beth's part, there really is no danger. Perhaps this is a fault in the writing, the author not adept enough to truly build tension, but with or without that, it is an engrossing story. Beth must read some pretty explicit stuff, as the period being relived involves a torrid affair, but there are numerous allusions to the deceit she is reading about even as she is undertaking a pretty serious deceit of her own. I think I had an inkling of the ending, though I didn't mentally spoiler myself by thinking about it too hard, and while it wasn't exactly surprising, it ended on a tantalizing note, which was satisfying.… (más)
 
Denunciada
karenchase | Jun 14, 2023 |
This was in a "Great fall reads" pile at the library and I was in the mood for something like this, what I call Austen-lite, along the lines of Georgette Heyer, but this wasn't even as good as her worst. It had a weak plot and poorly developed characters. I gave up about 1/3 of the way through.
 
Denunciada
AngeH | otra reseña | Jan 2, 2020 |
Very enjoyable! Have reread more than once. It is always a treat.
 
Denunciada
camelia23 | Jul 31, 2017 |
Slow "The Country Gentleman" byi Fiona Hill will always be my favorite.
Kindle
 
Denunciada
camelia23 | otra reseña | Jul 31, 2017 |

Listas

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Estadísticas

Obras
15
Miembros
309
Popularidad
#76,232
Valoración
½ 3.5
Reseñas
6
ISBNs
48

Tablas y Gráficos