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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The bittersweet pain of love lost, December 16, 2008
This review is from: The Ghost's Child (Hardcover)
Matilda, an elderly woman who lives in a small house surrounded by beautiful artifacts from a life spent journeying to the far corners of the globe, comes home one day to find a stranger --- a young boy --- sitting in her living room. After offering him biscuits and tea, she also offers him a story --- of her long life, a life filled with beauty, love and heartrending loss.
Matilda (who was known as Maddy when she was young) came from a well-off family in a seaside town. She was independent, unconventional and often lonely as a child, never seeming to fit in with those of her own age and social standing. After finishing boarding school, Maddy was taken on a worldwide tour by her father, a pursuit of one question: "What is the world's most beautiful thing?"
Maddy thinks she finds the answer during her journey, but she only discovers the truly most beautiful thing, the thing that will shape the rest of her life, upon returning home. There, on the beach near her parents' home, she find a young man, Feather, who lives with the sea birds she also adores. Feather owns nothing and cares for no one --- and Maddy falls hopelessly in love with his freedom, his quietness, his gentle strength.
"She knew for certain that Feather, homeless on the beach, tousled and tameless as a flash of lightning, was the most beautiful thing in the world. Cathedrals were ruins, compared to him. Stained-glass windows were mud." Overcoming her parents' objections to their relationship by promising that she and Feather will live a more conventional life, she fails to anticipate the consequences of trying to tame someone as wild as Feather.
Maddy's history of heartbreak and loss defines much of her life, which is also marked by achievement, sacrifice and a bittersweet homecoming. Fantastical elements abound as well, from an imaginary protector to talking sea creatures to Feather himself. These elements, combined with Sonya Hartnett's lyrical language, give the book the feeling of a fairy tale, even as it reinforces the notion that fairy-tale lives rarely exist, even in novels.
Although teens will certainly respond to its fantasy aspects as well as its meditations on love, loss and identity, adult readers may most readily grasp and respond to the novel's emotional heft and wisdom and recognize themselves and their relationships in passages like this one: "The days of sitting together idly watching the waves were a long time in the past. Before there'd been leaks to plug and garments to mend, they'd had nothing to do but linger and talk. Now they toiled and slept, and not much more. They no longer searched for faces in the clouds, or walked through the forest at midnight. They spoke a lot about the house, and hardly ever about the people who lived in it."
Adults who stumble upon this lovely novel will recognize themselves in its message of the bittersweet pain of love lost; younger readers will respond to its romantic notions and spirit of adventure. Like the best fables, THE GHOST'S CHILD can be read and enjoyed on many levels --- as a fantasy tale, a love story, an exquisite metaphor for the life each of us crafts for ourselves.
--- Reviewed by Norah Piehl
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Hauntingly lovely, October 16, 2008
This review is from: The Ghost's Child (Hardcover)
This is one of the most poignant tales of love and loss I've ever read. Full of sad regret and a mysterious, impenetrable mystique, it is a book I expect to reread many times.
An old woman, Maddy, tells the tale of her life to a young boy -- an unexpected visitor who shows up at her door. What she weaves for him is a beautiful, touching tale of a life full many beautiful experiences that shaped her. Her heart is lost early in her life to a windswept ocean waif, but their imperfect love casts a shadow on her entire life. There are bits of the fantastic -- though we almost wonder if they are only allegorical, metaphor -- and the bits are marked by a stunning, cold realism.
I honestly cannot do justice to this book in review. I have read few books more touching, and even fewer better written. An astoundingly beautiful tale that I am honored to have had the pleasure of reading.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Courtesy of Teens Read Too, October 23, 2008
This review is from: The Ghost's Child (Hardcover)
Matilda comes home one day to find a young boy sitting on her sofa. They have tea, and she tells him about her past. At that time, she went by Maddy, and she longed for a fairy tale life.
When Maddy finished school, she came home to her family's house by the sea. Her father asked her what she thought the most beautiful thing in the world was. She answered, "sea eagles." Her father decided that the two of them together would travel the world in search of the world's most beautiful thing, since he was not satisfied with her answer. After their travels, she was asked the question again. And she realized that she was the answer her father was looking for.
One day when she was back home, she went to the beach. She saw a young man and found herself walking towards him, scaring away the pelican that he was holding. She went to see him every day after that. She called him Feather. She married Feather, and they moved into a cottage in the forest.
He left one day, to be at his one place where he could be happy. Maddy could not come though, he told her. Weeks after, she wondered why he went to this one place and if he was happy. She decided that she needed to know the answer, so she had a sailboat made, and she set to sea. She saw many things, and spoke to sea life. She found Feather, and got her answer.
When she got back to her home, she left the cottage, unable to live there any longer. She decided she wanted to work in the war. She nursed injured soldiers, and from there decided that she wanted to be a doctor. From then on, she was Matilda. She helped people and then began to age. She was getting older, and lived in a house by herself. She ended her days in that house.
This was a very intriguing book. I was confused with the boy, but by the last chapter, I knew exactly who he was and why he was there. The life that Maddy lived was amazing. She went through so much, and many of those things weren't so good, which is very easy to relate to. Her parents were odd. Her father wanted Maddy to be who she wanted to be, whereas her mother just wanted her daughter to marry a rich man and not care about being happy, which bothered me. Feather was also confusing. He appeared out of nowhere. I was happy they married, but unhappy when he left her.
Overall, this was a very interesting book, and was hard to put down. I enjoyed it very much.
Reviewed by: Ashley B
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