|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
6 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Can't Believe It!,
By
This review is from: Brilliant (Paperback)
I absolutely cannot believe the talent of this author. In her third book, Roberts has truly blossomed into a world-class storyteller who can compete with the likes of the masters of this genre - Radclyffe, Kallmaker, Maas and others. When I finished the last page, I immediately flipped back to page one to start all over again. I have only done this two or three times in the past, but just couldn't walk away from this masterpiece. In fact, halfway through I contacted several friends to highly recommend `Brilliant' because that's exactly what this book is.
Diane is a gay college professor who lives alone almost cannot remember what romance is. Having recently reached the ripe old age of forty, she seems pretty happy with her life. That is, until she meets the enigmatic - and very young - Ronnie. Their first meeting yielded unexpected results. Those results are embarrassing for both women when they meet for the second time in Diane's classroom... where Ronnie is the student. The head of the department seems out to get Diane and steals her teaching assistant soon after school starts. This coincides with Ronnie's delivery of a brilliant class paper that Diane believes is plagiarized. Threatening to give her student a failing grade, Diane agrees to let Ronnie walk her through the younger woman's research process. Finally realizing that Ronnie actually did write her paper - and becoming desperate for a teaching assistant - Diane offers Ronnie the job. As these two women become more dependent on each other, their lives begin to change. Diane begins to wonder how she ever spent life alone. Ronnie falls in love for the first time and realizes monogamy is a treasure. The only problem is - can these two women ever really be together considering the difference in their ages, experience, and desires? Truly wonderful and captivating, I highly recommend this book to anyone who's ever been in love. The reader will find themselves yelling out loud to the characters trying to get them to listen to reason and their hearts. An unexpected ending tops off this brilliant book. Do yourself a favor and grab a copy today.
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
More than May/December,
By
This review is from: Brilliant (Paperback)
Brillant attracted me because it was teased in a general description to highlight a professor in her forties and her much younger grad student.
As the lines between professionality and personal life blur for Roni, the student, and Diane, Diane has to learn to make some very difficult choices. For Roni, this is her liberating moment in her life, away from home and her family. What worked: loved the chemistry for Roni and her roommates. It felt very ecclectic. At times, it felt over the top, but it was sweet and the additional cast of characters weren't useless, they all played an important role. I also liked Roni as a very 'hidden' lesbian. No one was really clued into her being a lesbian unless she let them know. It wasn't that she wasn't proud of her self being, it was simply just how she was that being gay wasn't the only part of her that people needed to know. What didn't work: Diane being so removed from her feelings for Roni that she completely cut Roni out of her life for a large segment. I also had trouble following Roni as she returned to a life style that she had given up as a child. I got a little tired of Roni trying so very hard to pull Diane from her rigidity and Diane stodgedly resisting straight through.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
An enjoyable romp through academia,
By B. Rabkeb (Seattle, WA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Brilliant (Paperback)
This book was well-written and competently edited. The characters were interesting. It wasn't perfect, but definitely worth a solid 3 stars.
First of all, I'm a sucker for the whole 'we mustn't get together logically, but emotionally we can't deny our chemistry' story lines. There's an urgency to the characters' actions, and built in conflict and drama as they wrestle with these disparate parts of their own minds. So this book started out really well for me, but things became kind of frustrating for me as the characters made the same mistakes repeatedly. Ronnie was an intelligent, vibrant and courageous character. Diane's fears and issues were understandable and well-presented and defended. These women were three-dimensional. But the middle-to-end of the book dwelt a little too much on Diane's wallowing versus Ronnie's triumph, which I felt was a shame. On the one hand, Diane deserved to wallow, so it was good to have her going through and feeling pain and regret, but on the other hand this reader kept waiting for her to wake up, so instead of enjoying myself reading the book, instead I'm trying to figure out the point of being forced to dwell on her deserved but ultimately tiresome self-flagellation, when I just wanted to reach the end of it. Was the point not to let our fears rule us? Not to give up on life? The whole thing just lost some steam at this point. But ultimately the ending was good and satisfying, though it was a bit annoying in that it seemed that neither partner was willing to put up a proper fight for their relationship. Did it mean a lot to them or not? However, perhaps this just reflects the dominant theme of the book, which seemed to be that differing perspectives are necessary to create balance: they needed to be together to find that fight. Overall it was a fun read and pleasant journey through college, friendship, academia, family and love.
5.0 out of 5 stars
A wonderful Read!,
By Robin (Mesa, Az USA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Brilliant (Paperback)
Brilliant by Ann Roberts
I'll skip the synopsis since other reviews have covered it nicely. Ann Roberts is very easy to read, her writing is smooth and enticing. Her characters are fleshed out and have some flaws as normal people do. I enjoyed this book, it entertained me which is my first criteria for any book. No slogging through this book, I ran through it and was very pleased with the ending. 5 star reviews for me means that I really enjoyed it. It doesn't have to make practical sense or even be grounded in reality, although this book is. Really, it's the author writing ability that brings the book to life and Ann Roberts has that knack. On the hot meter this was a 7; on the love meter it was a 9. **Remember - if you want your favorite authors to keep writing they have to be able to earn a living doing it so if at all possible buy the book NEW. If you're not going to keep it in your collection put it in the recycle bin to make another book.**
5.0 out of 5 stars
Delightfully original,
By
This review is from: Brilliant (Paperback)
Loved - loved - loved Ronnie! The opening chapters pull you right into the story and you think you might know what type of person Ronnie is but you wouldn't be completely right. Very original character, quirky and yet very grounded - self confident - brilliant and utterly determined. The Los Angeles setting is absolutely perfect for this story. A very erotic story, I was surprised at the twists and turns the author took the story. This is more than a romance. The story shows the growth of both Diane and Ronnie over a substantial period of time. The writing is fresh and keeps the reader guessing what will happen next!
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Diane get over yourself,
By
This review is from: Brilliant (Paperback)
I like books by Ann Roberts, and I enjoyed Ronnie. She is rather a "slut" in the early days, but she is also very young and it is fun being beautiful and young while being very aware of that power. Diane on the other hand was a total, whiny loser. I am in her age bracket and she acts like a adolescent self centered brat. That is the only reason I gave the book three stars. Other reviews have given a synopsis of the story so there is no need for me to. I liked the other characters though I felt I somehow missed where Brad became comfortable with himself and I enjoyed the momentum of two thirds of the book. I cannot give details of what irked me without giving away the DRAMA, but I really kept hoping things would turn out differently then they did. I will say that the book is no where near worth the hyped up current prices. I will continue to read other Ann Roberts book. Hopefully Diane is just the exception.
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
Brilliant by Ann Roberts (Paperback - May 1, 2007)
$13.95 $11.86
In Stock | ||