Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Beautiful, Tough Look at Love Gone Astray, December 4, 2003
In her second novel, "The Opposite Shore," Maryanne Stahl sets up a truly calamitous scenario: Rose discovers her husband and her sister in a romantic embrace. Thrown into the mix is Rose's teenage daughter who falls in love for the first time. Though such a set up could easily lead to soap opera cliche, Stahl's great skill never allows this to happen. Her characters are real and their reactions authentic. Stahl also has a great gift for description particularly of Shelter Island where much of the novel takes place. Indeed, at times I felt as though I were watching a movie: the characters, their actions and surroundings all felt so true and without contrivance. This is a beautiful, powerful novel that raises as many questions about love and forgiveness as it answers.
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent read -- engrossing and vibrant, July 28, 2004
Out for a sail aboard the family boat, the Ariel, on Memorial Day, one family's life is about to take a disastrous turn.
Rose, an aspiring painter, and William are the proud and happy parents of sixteen year old Miranda. Anna is Rose's sister and best friend, a pal to Miranda, an avid sailor herself, and close to William. They seem content.
However, when Rose goes home early, leaving William and Anna to close up the boat for the evening, she gets life-altering news. A painting of hers has been accepted in an upcoming gallery showing - her first big break. Flushed with excitement, she races back to the boat to share her exciting news. There, she finds her husband and her sister kissing. Immediately, everyone's world explodes. Betrayed and angry, Rose throws William out, cuts Anna from her life, and moves with her daughter for the rest of the summer to Shelter Island.
Stahl's writing is evocative and vivid. She brings Shelter Island to sparkling life while delving deeply into all four of these richly complex characters. This could be simple, it could devolve into melodrama. But instead Stahl mines this material in an honest and realistic way. Everyone has their flaws, and as they each struggle with their decisions and actions, the summer unwinds with rising tension and uncertainty. These relationships and people are so well rendered, along with the setting, that the reader is sucked into their world and understands, and often sympathizes, with their current situation.
Stahl apparently got the spark of inspiration for this book from Shakespeare's The Tempest. But this isn't a re-write. And though the jumping point for the plot is a betrayal, these characters sing with life, hopes, and frustrations. They are unique voices, though wholly understandable. And Stahl illuminates this world, unafraid to peek into the darker corners, all the way through to the satisfying conclusion.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An Exploration of Relationships, November 29, 2003
Maryanne Stahl uses the betrayal of husband and sister to launch Rose on a journey of self discovery that causes her to confront past pain as well as her relationships with her teen-age daughter and her sister. Stahl's breathtaking descriptions of Shelter Island form an excellent background for Rose's budding artistic career. Forming an effective counterpoint to Rose's journey is the stalled life of William and Anna, the husband and sister who must come to terms with the painful betrayal they've inflicted on Rose. The Opposite Shore is an excellent choice for anyone who wants to explore the relationships between men and women, sisters, or mothers and daughters.
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