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10 Reviews
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Perfect Summer Reading,
By
This review is from: The Carousel (Hardcover)
I found this book lying on my bookcase and thought since I needed a quick relief from everything going on in this household, I would pick this book up and read it. It is definitely a fast read and a comforting read. It has been years since I've read any of Belva Plain's books and this one is pretty entertaining.
This is about the Grey's family who owns an enterprising business that sells food and other products. There is Oliver Grey, the head of the family and his two sons, Ian and Clive and Dan, his nephew. The younger generation are running the enterprise now. Sally Grey, Dan's wife, is concerned about their daughter, who seems to have been molested. Ian is busy having an affair while mollifying his wife, Happy, and Clive is just a bachelor who hides away from the world with his numbers. Then there's Amanda, Dan's sister, who wants the company to buy her share out so she can fulfill her dreams of having a house for her girls who are runaways. This is their story and somehow there are dark secrets in everyone's closets. How are they related to one another? You have to read this book to find out. It is a pretty good read ~~ not the best I have ever read but it did a good job of keeping me entertained. It's perfect for that beach reading or for when you're camping outside and don't need a lot of heavy thoughts to clutter your mind. So grab this book, a soda and hang out for awhile. It's probably worth it. 6-6-06
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A look at a powerful family with a few secrets,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Carousel (Paperback)
I found this story to be both engaging and tragic, but in some places not wholly believable. Still, it is a good read. The characters are well-developed, and it definitely keeps the reader feeling involved. If you are a fan of Belva Plain, like me, you will find this book well worth your time.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good if you want to find a family more weird than your own!,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Carousel (Paperback)
Plain's writing is simple and straightforward, good if you've had a hard day in the trenches, and need to be reminded that other folks also live a life like a penny awful. The story itself is engaging, but not so complex that you can't put it down to fish the dog out of the tulip bed, and come back to discover you are totally lost to what's going on in the book. This work reminds me of something Danielle Steele would write on a slow day, similar in texture, but rather langui
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An interesting book that gets you involved with each person.,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Carousel (Paperback)
I REALLY ENJOYED THIS BOOK. THE AUTHOR REALLY MAKES YOU CARE ABOUT THE CHARACTERS. I RECOMMEND THIS TO SOMEONE WHO LOVES TO READ ABOUT DYSFUNCTIONAL FAMILIES! THIS BOOK MAKES YOUR OWN FAMILY SEEM VERY NORMAL.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Not one of Plain's best . . .,
By J. Hartman (Pittsburgh, PA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Carousel (Paperback)
The Carousel has a good plot and good detail. But the story leaves alot to be desired. Sally Grey has just found out that her five year old daughter, Tina, has been sexually abused. Sally is in shock but soon vows to find out who did it. The book goes through several storylines and plots. The characters get confusing at times but they are described in detail. The book was a little long and after the first chapter it really slowed down. The book ended abruptly and ruined the ending. The book is an okay read if you just need something to do. But if you're looking for a really good book, find another of Plain's books.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Just okay.,
This review is from: The Carousel (Audio Cassette)
A story that has the potential to shatter you, but doesn't quite get there. When Sally Gray discovers a startling family secret that could topple the Gray Foods family empire, she does some unusual things, and doesn't quite act in the way you would expect a loving mother to act. Still, Blair Brown does a good job reading the story, it just is paced very slowly, and Blair Brown's soft voice gives it a quietness it doesn't need to have. The child, Tina, is a strong and willful character, but underdeveloped and abstract. Then, suddenly and without warning, the story is gift wrapped and tied with a bow, and you are left with a lot of unanswered questions. A good story for a lazy summer afternoon by the pool, but no blockbuster.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Unlikeable characters,
By harpergirl "harpergirl" (Pennsylvania) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Carousel (Paperback)
I did read the book from start to finish because Belva Plain crafts a good story and keeps you in suspense until the end.
However, I could not find any empathy for several of the characters, and in fact disliked them immensely. Not all the villains got what they deserved in the end. I guess this is like real life!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Family saga, family secrets,
This review is from: The Carousel (Paperback)
This book features the Grey family, owners of the Grey corporation in a fictional upstate New York town. The story revolves mainly around Sally Grey, who married into the family when she wed Dan, nephew of patriarch Oliver Grey. The novel opens just after Sally has received devastating news about her 5-year old daughter, Tina, who has been acting out ever since the birth of her second child. As Sally and Dan struggle desperately to get to the bottom of Tina's difficulties, other problems in the family emerge: Oliver's sons Ian and Clive disagree about the direction for the family business, whereas Dan's estranged sister, Amanda, has her own ideas altogether.
Over the course of a calendar year, the stories of all of the above characters become more and more intertwined, with various secrets binding them all together. For the most part, the reader is privy to the inner workings of the Grey family, but author Plain does manage to include a few surprises; she also does a nice job of tying up all the loose ends by the end of the book. Overall, I found this to be a well-written, engaging, and even somewhat suspenseful novel; perhaps a little cliche-ic at times, but still a good, quick read.
3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
GENTLY WRITTEN,
By
This review is from: The Carousel (Paperback)
I have been an avid Belva Plain fan since the summer of 1996. That was when I was first introduced to her works and I can honestly say I have never once been disappointed. The characters are richly and vividly drawn and the story lines overlap and mesh together well. The family patriarch, Oliver Grey has a major flaw -- he is a pedophile. He not only has abused his granddaughter, Tina, he has also abused a niece many years earlier. Sally, the mother of Tina and the daughter-in-law of Oliver, wisely believes Tina when the child finally discloses what her grandfather had been doing to her. The only thing I had trouble with was when Sally told Tina that she [Tina] "mustn't let anybody touch her" if she didn't want them to. For pity's sake, a child cannot fend off an adult predator and to even suggest the child let her grandfather touch her improperly smacks of blame. This was a five-year-old, not an adult contemporary. She did not want, welcome or like what the man did to her and it is never the child's fault. Children don't LET adult predators hurt them. That was the only part I had trouble with. I also wondered why Daniel and Sally didn't talk to Tina first when they had reason to believe something was amiss. It seemed that communication was a long time coming, but it was wonderful once it did.I liked the way the reader was kept guessing. One never knew which way the family business would turn. Would environmental or business interests be chosen? A combination? And who really killed Oliver Grey? This is an excellent book and I would highly recommend it. I loved it.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very Intreging look at the Grey Family,
By
This review is from: The Carousel (Paperback)
This book is about the Grey family of Upstate New York. Oliver Grey presides over a group including his two sons, Ian and Clive, Ian's wife Happy and Oliver's nephew Dan and his wife Sally and his children Tina and Susannah. Oliver's niece Amanda is also in the picture, but she lives in California and does not visit. The main story involves Dan's family who find out that Tina has been molested, but they don't want to believe it. A secondary story involves Grey's woods which Ian wants to sell so that they can make money. Ian and Amanda are the only two because Dan and Clive don't want to sell. The next story involves Ian, Happy and Clive. Even though Ian is happily married he likes to sleep around. He has had a mistress for the last three years named Roxanne. They are happy, but then she wants him to leave his wife but he wont. She brakes it off and goes after Clive. They get married, but after a while Roxanne and Ian start sleeping with each other again and she gets pregnant. The Climax of the story comes in December, which involves all these storylines. Amanda comes to visit Dan and tells Sally something that makes her think about Tina's situation and goes to visit Oliver. He is cleaning stuff and suddenly a gun goes off, killing Oliver. Who killed Oliver Grey?-That is something that gets answered at the end of the book. |
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The Carousel by Belva Plain (Paperback - April 2, 1996)
$7.50
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