- Audio CD
- ASIN: B002CYCOBU
- Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars See all reviews (55 customer reviews)
- Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,075,373 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
52 of 59 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Story telling,
This review is from: The Story Sisters: A Novel (Hardcover)
A title like "The Story Sisters" could be any kind of book -- and in the case of Alice Hoffman's writing, it means that the girls are "story" by name and by nature. While the story focuses too much on one troubled sister and has a rather rushed ending, it's still a mistily moving experience, and a look at what love can bring people.Ever since their parents' divorce, the three Story sisters -- Elv, Meg and Claire -- have been wrapped up in a fairy-tale world of fairies, roses and otherworldly queens. And the girls are inseparable, speaking their Arnish language and listening to Elv's magical stories. But when Elv spends time in Paris, she comes back a changed girl -- she is increasingly drawn into a world of teenage rebellion, sex and drugs, even as she still tries to break free of the mortal world. And her increasingly ugly behavior fractures her relationship with her sisters -- even a trip to a rehab/high-school doesn't help. Then Elv's wild ways result in a devastating tragedy that tears her family apart, and drives her into the arms of a loving, charming conman. In the years that follow, the girls' mother Annie is confronted by both love and illness, and a devastated Claire immerses herself in a jewelry store in Paris, living with her grandmother. Elv's life continues on a downward spiral, until a new development brings the broken family back together. Leaves and roses, ice and water, black tattoos and blood, tomatoes and jewels, and three black-haired daughters who gradually learn that life is only a fairy tale if you keep it that way, and that imagination alone cannot make a life beautiful. "The Story Sisters" is a vivid piece of work, and Alice Hoffman proves that she's able to wrap even nasty stuff (like heroin addiction and rape) in a veil of magical realism. Hoffman's writing is beautifully lush and vivid, overflowing of natural descriptions and striking phrases (such as pasts being stitched to shadows with black thread). And as the years unwind, she explores the effects of death, illness, and sometimes of new love from unexpected sources. But she also explores some of the seedier parts of life through Elv, including child molestation, drug addiction and a fiery affair with "the one who turns me inside out." That in fact is the biggest problem -- there's such a focus on Elv that the other characters are eclipsed. It might have been better if the book had been called "The Story Sister." Much of the last few chapters are concerned with Claire, but so rushed that she never quite grows a personality beyond "sullen emo girl." Elv herself is not very sympathetic -- her passionate, ethereal nature gets a bad bruising over the course of the book, but she often gets so nasty and reckless that it's hard to care much. Her overstressed mother Anna is far more likable, especially when she strikes up a doomed romance with a kindly detective; and the "ama" Natalia is a vibrant old lady who just wants her family happy and together. "The Story Sisters" suffers from an overemphasis on Elv, but the exquisite writing and awkward explorations of "real life" make this worth a look.
26 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
What Story?,
This review is from: The Story Sisters: A Novel (Hardcover)
Alice Hoffman writes beautiful descriptive prose. Unfortunately, that's just not enough to make up for the predictable plot of "The Story Sisters." Unrelentingly dark and melodramatic to the point of parody, I found myself looking at the cover to make sure I was actually reading a book by an author whose writing skills I have great respect for. Of the many characters who take up space in this novel, there are only three who act as if they have any brains at all; Grandmother Natalia, her friend Madame Cohen, and a poor fellow named Pete Smith who makes an appearance towards the end to try and clean up a plot line that has veered into romance novel territory. The Story parents, and the Sisters of the title are so unlikeable I found myself saying "Are you kidding me?" out loud at several junctures in the book. Three stars out of loyalty to the writer, but that's generous for such a disappointing book.
16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A winner!,
By BeachReader (Delaware) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Story Sisters: A Novel (Hardcover)
After reading a fantastic book last week, I found it hard to believe that I was lucky enough to find another great one. I always anxiously await Alice Hoffman's books and this one was well worth the wait.In "The Story Sister"s, the author is back to her old form: less strangeness and more storytelling, similar to the stories and their complex characters that she presented in "Turtle Moon" and "Seventh Heaven". The writing is so beautiful, lush, and magical, with such powerful imagery. It took me about 40 pages to just give myself over to the story and not try to figure out the fantasy life (Arnelle) that the three sisters wove. After that, I was totally captivated and could not put the book down. This story of the redemptive power of love and family bonds was just wonderful. Highly recommended!!!!
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