13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Deep, Moving and Very Sad, August 8, 2009
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
This was hard to put down. The Promised World is a life that Lily and her twin brother Billy live in. A world of stories, plots, memory lapse and many lies. Lily is a Professor of American Literature and loves to read. Billy never made it through college, married young and had three children. Lily has been married 12 years but has no childen.
When Billy is accidently killed in what is presumed a suicide, Lily goes into a deep depression in a world that she remembers only Billy and what he told her happened in her life. She has no memory of her childhood other than what Billy has told her.
This is the story of how Lily tries to save Billy's children from what she thinks is abuse from their mother and her boyfriend. It is also the story of Patrick, Lily's husband and his attempts to understand his mentally impaired wife. There is much for Lily to remember about her past and she suffers through this painfully. I suffered with her as she re-lives the abuse of her childhood and begins to learn her life has been built on lies.
Very good book. I couldn't put it down.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I loved it, October 10, 2009
I only had to read one review of The Promised World to know that I would like this book. I requested it from my library immediately, and as soon as I took it home, I dove right in. I had to use all of my willpower not to finish the novel that same day - it captivated me from the start.
The book starts out with Lila learning that her twin brother, Billy, has just died - he's committed "suicide by police". Since Billy is hands-down the most important person in her life, she predictably falls to pieces. But Lila is not the only person who was affected by Billy's death - he left behind a (soon to be ex-) wife and three young children, who are also obviously shaken with Billy's death. And in the aftermath of his death, Lila begins to question everything she thought she knew about her brother, about her past, and about her own memories.
The Promised World is a pretty awesome novel. Just as I expected, I loved the book and couldn't put it down. Let me first tell you that the novel is told from multiple perspectives - something I love when it's done well, and Lisa Tucker definitely does it well here. The story is told by Lila, her husband Patrick, Ashley (Billy's wife), and William (Billy's ten-year-old son). Hearing from all these different characters really gives the reader a true feel for who Billy was, since each person had such a different relationship with him than the others. It also helped to see the characters for what they really were - Lila, for example, seemed okay when she was narrating, but from any other characters' perspective, it was clear that she was not handling Billy's death well, that she was being completely self-absorbed and wasn't thinking of anything but her own grief. And Ashley was clearly not a perfect mother, but she was a totally different person from Lila's point of view as she was from Patrick's or William's.
The family secrets are exposed slowly in the book, creating a tense atmosphere that really kept me guessing. Obviously child abuse is at the heart of the issues in Lila's family, but who, what, where, when, and how are some of the questions Lila doesn't seem to know the answers to about her own past. She has vague memories, but Billy constructed elaborate stories about their childhood that made her forget most of what really happened. After Billy's death, Lila needs to figure out for herself what's real and what's not concerning her own life. I had an idea what secrets Lila would uncover, and I ended up being partly right but partly VERY wrong, so I can tell you right now that the book is not too predictable, which I loved. There were some aspects to the story that I'm still confused on, actually, and now that I'm thinking about it I'm not sure that Lisa Tucker meant for the reader to have all the answers in the end. I think that Lila herself didn't even have all the answers in the end, but it's what she did learn about herself and her brother that is important.
The Promised World is definitely a book that I'd recommend reading. It's got suspense, drama, family secrets, multiple points of view - what's not to love?
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
mind chess, September 13, 2009
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
This is a very abosorbing psychological thriller involving a twin brother and sister, now grown up. Lila is a professor of English, married to Patrick. Billy, although a "genius",works in construction, is married to Ashley and has three kids. Strange things begin to happen within the first 50 pages. Nothing is what it seems. Lila and Billy are exceptionally close. Lila mentions that Billy has forged their parents' death certificates. Why? How? It comes out that the twins had a stepfather who hurt them in some way. What happened to their real father? Billy suddenly commits suicide in a way that puts him on the national news. Lila begins to have memory problems and can't distinguish actual memories from dreams. Patrick, thinking she's depressed over her brother's death, starts digging into the past, one of the worst mistakes he could have made. Ashley refuses to let them see the kids. This sets the scene. It takes to the end of the book to find out what is real and what is fantasy, who is good and who is evil, who is telling the truth and who is lying. Chess is the family game, with its strategies matching the mind games played. The destruction stretches out over three generations of the Cole family, which Billy always referred to as "cursed." Hurtling toward a nail-biting ending, you won't put this book down. Great combination of suspense and family novel. One of the best of the good Vine books I've read.
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