Most Helpful Customer Reviews
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
EASY, SMILE PROVOKING LISTENING, October 23, 2007
Film and television actor Robertson Dean slips easily into the persona of Joe Anderson. Dean's voice is low with a slight sibilance that makes the character, a regular fellow, even more attractive and accessible. This voice is warm, inviting conversation, perhaps confidences.
We're introduced to Joe as a teenager. His father has died so he and his mother move to Minneapolis. It's always difficult for a teenager to make new friends but Joe has a lot going for him as he's an ace hockey player. He also has someone he's going for - Kristi Casey, head cheerleader. Less attractive and sexually active is Darva, his good friend.
Joe had hopes of becoming a star on ice but life does take those twists and turns and he winds up a grocer, albeit a popular and inventive one. He's happy with what he does and enjoys his relationships with customers. Kristi, on the other hand, isn't content. She's a striver as a tele-evangelist with eyes for our nation's capital.
Both Darva and Kristi will turn up from time to time in Joe's life which keeps listeners wondering what will happen next.
The View from Mount Joy is easy and often laughable listening as we go through the years with this guy named Joe.
- Gail Cooke
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
And a Joyful View It Is!, September 6, 2007
I laughed, laughed again, laughed louder and longer as the book raced by. Please don't let it stop, I want this story to go on indefinitely! Lorna Landvik's latest is a true laugh riot, except when it's poignantly sad and a bit heartbreaking.
Now, I admit I'm a card-carrying member of the Lorna fan club dating back to Patty Jane's House of Curl but her latest rivals Angry Housewives as the best yet. As the story opens, we're all back in high school in the early 1970s. I don't know about anyone else, but I'd swear Lorna and I must have been in the same class doing the same insane things. How did we ever survive unscathed?
Book clubs who have enjoyed Landvik's earlier works will find much to discuss in Mount Joy -- religion, politics, family, friends, food, travel and children all abound.
Finally, I really want to shop at Joe's grocery to win a contest, view Darva's art, have a tea party with Flora and hate Kristi and every other high school girl just like her. Terrific cast of characters that we've come to expect from Ms. Landvik. Don't miss the reference to Patty Jane and the description of the waitresses at diNapoli!
I couldn't read this fast enough and I hated to see it end. Now I'm already waiting again!!
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
I loved this book, April 12, 2008
THE VIEW FROM MOUNT JOY by Lorna Landvik
Rating: 4 Stars
April 12, 2008
Late last year I read THE VIEW FROM MOUNT JOY, Lorna Landvik's latest novel, and as with her past novels, I loved it. I've been a fan of Ms Landvik for years now, and for me she rarely disappoints. In this most recent novel, the story revolves around Joe Andreson, who started out in life full of promise. He was on his way to becoming a professional athlete and did well in school.
He had a lot of friends, including a new best friend, Darva, who was a social outcast, but the two become best friends. It's Kristi Casey, the school's most popular girl, that gains Joe's affections, however. Kristi is the opposite of what Darva stood for, and as the years pass, Joe begins to find out what Kristi is really all about.
Things don't quite work out for Joe, and he ends up working at a local grocery store, a job that ends up being his career as he approaches middle age. Through Joe's eyes, the reader will see the truth behind Kristi, a girl who grows into a woman who is selfish and manipulative. At the same time, Joe continues his friendship with Darva, who by now has a child of her own, and he lives out his days at the grocery store, wondering why his life turned out the way it had. Kristi flits in and out of his life, for one reason or another, and it is intersting to watch this character change over the years, but was she really changing, or was her new life just an extension of the old manipulative Kristi?
I found this book, along with all of Lorna Landvik's novels, engrossing. Her past few novels followed similar themes, in which the title character is not one that is considered a success story, or even popular, but there is always a lesson learned by the end of the book. Joe may not have reached the goals in life he had dreamed of as a child, but to those who loved him the most could truly say that he lived fully, and that he truly did achieve a highly successful life.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
|