A novel of unnerving suspense and terrifying insight into the perversities of passion, A Dangerous Woman is as devastatingly honest as Martha herself.
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A novel of unnerving suspense and terrifying insight into the perversities of passion, A Dangerous Woman is as devastatingly honest as Martha herself.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Interesting and Compelling,
By Kelly Budd (Alberta, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Dangerous Woman (Mass Market Paperback)
Meet Martha Horgan. By all accounts she is odd, peculiar, and haunting. Martha is definately suffering from a mental illness. But the question that must be asked is how this illness came to be. Was Martha always odd, or did something unspeakable occur to make her this way? Martha craves to be like everybody else. She is starved for friendship, love, and mostly normalacy. She is often found obsessing about contacting her 'best friend', or lurking about watching people. Martha's obsessions are often disturbing to those around her. Set in a small town, Martha Horgan is a household name, a taboo. Martha, who is relentlessly truthful, does not have the control to hold back, even when it means diaster for herself. Through Martha's truth, she is often victimized by those who she preceives closest to her. A Dangerous Woman is an interesting and compelling read, you will want to find out how Martha resolves all her difficulties. Mary McGarry Morris has created a diverse novel with many twists and turns! Accompained by a diverse cast of characters, A Dangerous Woman is a novel to read!
12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Her characters are very heavy and realistic,
By
This review is from: A Dangerous Woman (Mass Market Paperback)
I happen to LOVE Mary McGarry Morris...I've read all of the Oprah books and she, of all authors, writes the most about very very real people and situations. This is a depressing situation book, but if you like those "heavy family dramas", you'll love this one. It's NOT all "happy and worked out" at the end. I felt so bad for Martha, yet, I would have had to run away from her too, she's overwhelming and just "not right" and very annoying to everyone! The last sentance blew me away - it just finalized her situation and mentality in my mind. And Mary McGarry Morris - when is your NEXT book coming out - I CAN'T WAIT!
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Leaves a Lasting Mark,
By a reader (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Dangerous Woman (Mass Market Paperback)
Compelling and heartbreaking, Morris weaves a haunting tale of a lonely young woman's losing battle to gain social acceptance, love, respect, and a healthy life of her own. Alienated and ridiculed by her small community, the origins of what make Martha Horgan so strange and different from those around her are unknown. The "dangerous" qualities referred to in the title put off those around her and ultimately lead to her undoing: her belief that the truth must always be known, under all cirumstances, her inability to function around others in society, her tempermental outbursts, and her undying fixations on people. Martha is richly drawn in three-dimensions as a character both frustrating and sympathetic, unlikable yet lovable, exasperating yet endearing, and ultimately, all too human. Morris does a superb job of painting those inhabit Martha's world as equally complex and contradictive, particuarly Frances and Mac. These two judge Martha for her abnormalities, yet their own distorted belief systems and foilables are all too abundent, and their own behavior quite questionable at times. In many ways, they see reflected in Martha the qualities they fear the most about themselves. Morris does an elegent job of depicting the culture of their community and the adverse reactions of "normal" society to those who are different. I liked that Martha's mental illness remained undefined....it was an interesting way of highlighting that people are afraid of what they can't label, not all diverse people can be placed in a tight category, and it raised questions of whether or not the base of the problem was biological or the result of her life experience. Overall, a worthy read: thought-provoking and well-written, sensitive yet brutal, yet not a difficult or lenghty read by any means.
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