Pulse en una miniatura para ir a Google Books.
Cargando... Sleepwalking in Daylightpor Elizabeth Flock
Ninguno Cargando...
Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. It would have gotten four stars, but the first quarter to half took some reading to get through. Seemed like it was going no where and was almost a constant downer. Then it picked up mid way...and the last quarter I could not put it down! Still...I am reading to many "I am tired of my marriage books!" need a happy ever after love story! ( ) Sad story and it was hard for me to relate or like the main character but the story was well written and while some parts of the plot were predictable, some important elements were not which kept me involved. I wish there was more development with the husband or that we had a chapter from his POV to understand his part in this tangled web. Overall an enjoyable read. This is a realistic drama about a family who is struggling to communicate and stay connected to each other. The story is told through the eyes of the mother, Samantha and her teenage daughter, Cameron who are both unhappy with their situation in life. Cameron, who was adopted by Samantha and her husband when she was two years old, has conflicting feelings and feels that she doesn’t belong in this family, or anywhere. She secretly starts to look for her birth mother. Samantha’s marriage is passionless, her relationship with Cameron is falling apart and she is bored with being a ‘stay-at-home’ Mum. Her despair leads her to be so caught up in herself that she fails to realise the extent of her daughter’s self-destructive ways. This novel is emotionally strong and will keep you wanting to know what happens next. My Synopsis: Sleepwalking in Daylight is the story of a mother and a daughter. Samantha Friedman wonders on a daily basis if this is all there is? carpools and soccer games, errands and book club meetings. Is there more to life than living with a husband who is depressed and feels absolutely nothing and a Goth daughter who can't stand her? Sam, uses her relationship with a stranger to help her escape her everyday life. Clandestine meetings at a local coffee house and secret e-mails fill her days and her mind. Cammy Friedman feels like an outcast. Since finding out she was adopted Cammy has gotten into wearing all black clothing and white make-up. Drawing black teardrops on her jaw and messing around with a disreputable crowd. Is there more to life than this? Being an outcast who doesn't belong at school or at home? Cammy escapes by thinking and searching for her birth mother and by smoking reefer and popping pills. Until one day there isn't any escape for either of them. My Thoughts: This book caused me to shed a tear or two, which means it accomplished it's purpose. If a book can make you feel something, if it can move you in some way. Isn't that what it's all about? When I write I want to make a difference. I want to show someone something to inform them to make them think and Elizabeth Flock certainly did that for me. I find myself identifying with Samantha. There was a time in my life that I just felt like I was going through the motions, that life was just a succession of bad days and worse nights. My children were small and I just wanted more. I wasn't the person I always dreamed I'd be. I'm glad it didn't take a drastic situation to make me see that I had to change. But, I can see how in some people's lives that defining moment happens that way. Cammy is such a scared little girl in a teenagers body. She just wants to be loved for who she is. I wonder what my daughter thinks about. I wonder if she'll be faced with some of the hardships Cammy had to go through. I wonder if I'm doing enough? Am I asking the right questions? How well do I know her friends? Am I really aware of what's going on in her life? This book will make you think. It make you feel something. Whether it is desperation, sadness, even a kinship with Samantha or Cammy. You won't put this one down feeling the same way you did when you picked it up. (This book was provided by Goldberg McDuffie for review) I give this one 4 out 5 apples from my book bag.
"Sleepwalking in Daylight" is a finely wrought heartbreaker of a novel, a haunting cautionary tale. Former journalist Elizabeth Flock has a good eye for detail and a good ear for dialogue, both internal and external....And, ultimately, that's the strength of "Sleepwalking in Daylight." It's many parents' experience and nightmare at the same time, well told. There, but for the grace of God, go I.
Follows the parallel paths of a mother, who wants to feel something, and her teenaged daughter, who needs to feel absolutely nothing, as they each indulge in desperate, furtive escapism. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
Debates activosNingunoCubiertas populares
Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyClasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
¿Eres tú?Conviértete en un Autor de LibraryThing. |