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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars memorable characters
I'm an English professor with a particular interest in contemporary women's fiction. I finished Snow Island a couple of weeks ago and find I remain haunted by the characters and the place. Towler makes an obscure New England island and its inhabitants come thoroughly alive in a lyrical, sensitive narrative that pulled me in and hasn't yet let go. Her rendering of the...
Published on February 26, 2002

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1 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Unexciting & Uneventful
"Snow Island" was a disappointment. I read it, hoping something would happen on the next page. It was quite boring and reading it tedious. Teenaged girls' first crushes & kisses, a middle aged man who couldn't recover from his aunt's death. An aunt, by the way, whom he shared a bed with while growing up, thankfully, not anything to do with sex. Very odd characters in the...
Published on March 4, 2004


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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars memorable characters, February 26, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Snow Island (Hardcover)
I'm an English professor with a particular interest in contemporary women's fiction. I finished Snow Island a couple of weeks ago and find I remain haunted by the characters and the place. Towler makes an obscure New England island and its inhabitants come thoroughly alive in a lyrical, sensitive narrative that pulled me in and hasn't yet let go. Her rendering of the impact of WWII on local life is extremely compelling. I am still mourning the characters who don't survive and hoping for a sequel that will follow those who do into the post-WWII years. I've read dozens of women's coming-of-age novels and this one is a stand-out, in part because its rendering of a teenage girl is complemented by its focus on an intriguing adult male character, in part because of the skill with which Towler develops the setting. This is an exceptionally well crafted first novel.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "This is one you'll remember for a long time......", February 1, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Snow Island (Hardcover)
This novel has it all - the great atmospherics of an
isolated sumer island, the steadily building faraway
war coming on like the first chill of autumn, the
tender stirrings of first lovedreams, but most of all -
the irrevocable moving together of two completely
different people passing like ships in the night only
to awaken to one another in their hour of deepest need.
The characters grow on you in ways you never imagined
and for a reader who tires easily, this one held my
attention right on through, and that's saying a lot.
A great read here for vacation time or anytime ..riveting
in a sweetly powerful way like a spring shower. Don't let
this one slip by!
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A book you will want to read again, January 20, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Snow Island (Hardcover)
I just put Snow Island down. The author's debut is wonderful. I professionally review books for a newspaper and constantly read hyperbole about debut novels being the greatest thing since....

Snow Island delivers. With convincing characters, a wonderful sense of place, I found myself wanting to retreat to an island just like it.

Bravo Ms. Towler, I look forward to your next!

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Captivating and Honest..., May 1, 2002
By 
This review is from: Snow Island (Hardcover)
16 year old Alice lives on a small island in the 1940s with her mom and little brother. Her father died when she was 11 and a loneliness has lingered with her ever since. She's more mature than her best friend and relates to older people on the island.

In particular, she is similar to George, who lost his aunt to suicide decades before, when she mistakenly thought he died in the world war 1. In this time of war and tragedy, the loneliness only grows in these two characters who come to have a special connection to each other, even though they barely interact.

This novel started off slow but before I knew it I was hooked. The story came to life through it's honest execution and three-dimensional characters. The pacing was natural and the situations were believable. Alice seemed so real to me and I miss her now that the book has ended. I felt like I completely understood her. Alice is very wise for her age, yet still innocent. I cannot wait until Volume 2 and 3 come out and I hope to see Alice in both novels (Volume 2 is to take place in the 1960s and Volume 3 in the 1980s on Snow Island).

Katherine Towler has an impressive talent with words and strong character development. Her debut novel stands out as one of the greatest novels I have ever had the pleasure to read. I highly recommend!

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars THE BEAUTY OF THIS BOOK, May 22, 2002
By A Customer
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Snow Island (Hardcover)
is that it can be read and appreciated by young adults and grown adults alike. It takes a skillful author to pull off the feat of capturing such a wide audience. For me, (adult male), it was the story of memories and how they contiually haunt us and beckon us to track them down. For my 14-year-old daughter, it was more the coming of age story about a young woman. What we both appreciated was the fine, spare writing, minimal details which deliver maximum effect, and the colorful characters. I recommend this book to anyone, but especially to mothers/daughters or fathers/daughters or aunts/nieces (you get the drift) who want to share a book together. The last novel I read was Delillo's Underworld, an interesting book, but, could my daughter and I pass it back and forth on the beach? Not likely. But Snow Island, Yes. Order now.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Coming of age in wartime, July 11, 2011
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Snow Island (Kindle Edition)
Snow Island, a tiny speck off the coast of Rhode Island, turns out to be the central character in this coming-of-age story set in 1941 -- on the eve of the attack on Pearl Harbor. The island is beautifully described in all its moods, most of all in the heat of summer.

Alice, the spunky 16-year-old who is the main character,keeps her family afloat by tending a groceries store. Her father drowned in a boat accident; her mom is pretty useless. Through Alice we meet other characters -- Ethan the attractive but shifty lighthouse keeper, Alice's friends and the various summer people that come to the island. There is also the weird character of George -- a kind of semi-autistic man who went off the fight in the First World War and came back to find his two aunts who had raised him dead. He continues to visit the island once a year like clockwork just as the weather clears and summer begins.

Alice makes her mistakes (I won't include spoilers) and fights her way through them. The book is well-written and genial. My one criticism is that it while it eventually deals with very powerful issues of life and death, it fails to convey the intensity and sense of importance that some of them deserve. Tragic and ghastly events are descibed in a ho-hum way that somehow devalues their significance.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Snow Island, September 8, 2005
By 
Charlie C. Pistolis (greensboro, north carolina United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Snow Island (Paperback)
I didn't want it to end but I could not put it down. I read it in 24 hours. It stays true to life as very few times does things turn out as we expect or so perfect. This story will stay with me for a long time. I hope the author will revisit Alice's life in another book. I can't wait to read other books by this author.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a dazzling debut, reminiscientof Woolf., March 26, 2004
By 
Felicia Sullivan (New York, ny United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Snow Island (Hardcover)
A dazzling debut, Snow Island follows the dual stories of Alice Daggett and George Tibbits in a small isolated island populated by quahoggers and eccentrics during the Second World War. Towler weaves the two plot lines intricately, at the same time subtly relaying the nuances of the island's inhabitants through gossip and tales.

Sixteen-year old Alice Daggett, haunted by the tragic death of her father six years prior and the overbearing presence of her mother Evelyn, never quite fits into the strict societal rules of the small gossiping town. Her awkwardness as she becomes aware of her own sexuality-her fear of not understanding her role as a woman and her fear of her inability to fulfill it-is beautifully told. Snow Island also unravels the unique story of George Tibbits, a recluse in his forties, who returns to the island each year in order to gain some closure regarding the death of the two women who raised him.

Snow Island is an evocative work with characters carefully chosen and crafted. Moving and luminous, it breaks the clichés of war novels. The characters and their stories resonate and linger long after the last page.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Power of Place, January 28, 2003
By 
Jeanne Morris (Ocean View, Delaware) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Snow Island (Hardcover)
Snow Island, by Katherine Towler, is a lovingly rendered novel about place, about childhood, and about the power of memory. It asks the reader the following question:

"What is more powerful -- the need to remember? or the need to forget?

Snow Island is a small island located off the coast of Rhode Island. The men of Snow Island engage in the dangerous business of quahogging, while their families eke out a living running small businesses that depend on the wealthier summer residents for survival.

In 1941, Alice Daggett is a sixteen-year old, living on the island. She attends school in a one-room schoolhouse with twins Lydia and Pete Giberson -- the only other children her age on the island. Since the death of her father five years earlier, Alice also shoulders the responsibility of keeping the family store running. George Tibbit is a recluse in his forties and the owner of the island's twin houses. He returns to Snow Island each year in an excessive act of homage to the two women -- his aunts -- who raised him. When George left to serve in World War I he spent a day saying good-by to all the places he loved best. Now he returns each summer hoping perhaps that he might "meet himself there once again -- a teenaged boy running over the rocks and down to the water, plunging in."

As the isolated island community is drawn into war again, the lives of George and Alice and the island people are altered dramatically as they face the consequences of loss and the choices made for love.

"Alice supposed George Tibbits was crazy, and his aunts before him, but she thought she knew what made them crazy -- people like Lydia and the rest of the islanders. Sarah and Bertie Tibbits were just trying to live the way they wanted, as George was now, but that wasn't good enough for the islanders. No. you had to attend the chicken suppers and stop by the store for the latest gossip and behave just like everyone else."

Even though both George and Alice are forced to leave the island, they both find they cannot escape from the hold Snow Island has on them. The island resides within them and pulls them back time and again. It is only by leaving, however, that they see how inextricably bound they are to Snow Island -- this first place -- the home of their child hoods.

Thomas Wolfe tells us we can't go home again. He was as much right as he was wrong. You can return; you can go home, not as the "you" of your childhood but as the person you have become. You can return to that first place where all will be same even as it is all so very different. That first place knew you when and it can know you again. It is up to you to choose whether you want to remember or whether you want to forget.

Snow Island by Katherine Towler is the story of how George Tibbit and Alice Daggett come to know the truth about the place of childhood and how they both choose to remember.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Snow Island, March 2, 2006
By 
This review is from: Snow Island (Paperback)
Beautiful imagery of this small town island community. A slice of New England life. Characters are ones we've met in our lives. The plot is carefully constructed and holds the reader's attention. Rich language. Take this one with you to the beach, the mountains or your favorite vacation site. Highly recommended.
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Snow Island
Snow Island by Katherine Towler (Paperback - January 28, 2003)
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