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The Lace Reader: A Novel Paperback – August 18, 2009
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length416 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateAugust 18, 2009
- Dimensions1 x 5.36 x 8.06 inches
- ISBN-100061624772
- ISBN-13978-0061624773
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“A spine-tingler set in Salem...[with] an irresistible pull...The Lace Reader is tailor-made for a boisterous night at the book club.” — People (People Pick)
“[A] richly imagined saga of passion, suspense, and magic.” — Time magazine
“Suspenseful and literary catnip-for-book-clubs...while it’s surprisingly gritty for having “lace” in the title, we’re calling this now as the beach read of ’08.” — New York magazine
“An engrossing modern-day twist on the classic Gothic novel….the story both astonishes and satisfies. In short, The Lace Reader is great entertainment.” — Tampa Tribune
“Gripping…a marvelously bizarre cast of characters (living and dead) in a uniquely colorful town.” — Washington Post Book World
“Finely rendered moments make this a novel to savor―a story as textured as it is imaginative... a story that readers will find as lovely as a swatch of handmade lace.” — Rocky Mountain News
“Brunonia Barry has pulled off a major feat with her debut, The Lace Reader: It’s a gorgeously written literary novel that’s also a doozy of a thriller, capped with a jaw-dropping denouement that will leave even the most careful reader gasping.” — Dallas Morning News
“What makes Brunonia Barry’s compulsively readable debut even more interesting is the spice added by fillips both psychic and supernatural.” — Denver Post
“The Lace Reader casts an enthralling spell...As The Lace Reader unspools, we are drawn into a whirling vortex of deceit. Barry untangles these confusing strands of mystery with an artful precision.” — Minneapolis Star Tribune
“Barry excels at capturing the feel of smalltown life, and balances action with close looks at the characters’ inner worlds. Her pacing and use of different perspectives show tremendous skill and will keep readers captivated all the way through.” — Publishers Weekly, starred review
“Surprise endings are tough to pull off--too often they aren’t a surprise to anyone but the main character. To Barry’s credit, she genuinely got me.” — Christian Science Monitor
“An ambitious debut. Unusual and otherworldly, this is a blizzard of a story which manages to pull together its historical, supernatural and psychiatric elements. A survivor’s tale of redemption.” — Kirkus Reviews
“Barry does a fantastic job of sketching out her characters. The Whitney women, one and all, are intriguingly real.” — San Antonio Express-News
“A ‘romance’ in the Nathaniel Hawthorne sense of the word a dark tale of sin and guilt that blends the mundane and the fantastic, with a glimmer of redemptive hope at its core that all the Gothic trappings cannot obscure.” — Tulsa World
“Barry has written a meditative, lyric novel that in its discursive storytelling style full of digressions and expository sections on interesting facts will appeal to people who enjoy savoring a book one section at a time.” — Raleigh News & Observer
“The Lace Reader unravels a magical, yet tragic family’s tale...Barry has cleverly and delightfully set us up. With one fell swoop, she cuts the last thread, and the characters she has so carefully created unravel to reveal secrets we had not even begun to guess.” — Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
“[For] fans of Dennis Lehane’s Shutter Island, Chris Bohjalian’s The Double Bind.” — Booklist
“Barry weaves a suspenseful tale of witchcraft and dark mystery…Barry’s depictions of time and place are marvelously descriptive.” — Roxanne Price, Elle
“A gorgeously written literary novel that’s a doozy of a thriller, capped with a jaw-dropping denouement that will leave even the most careful reader gasping.” — Chicago Tribune
“Past and present mysteries merge in a fast-moving narrative that builds through a numerous small dramas to a theatrical conclusion.” — Katherine Turman, Elle
“The Lace Reader is a page-turner, and the ending is almost as shocking as the film The Sixth Sense.” — Salem Gazette
“Barry’s depictions of her characters’ altered states of consciousness are beautifully rendered. And “The Lace Reader” establishes Brunonia Barry as a force...” — The Olympian
“With THE LACE READER, Brunonia Barry plunges us through the looking glass and beyond to a creepy and fascinating world. Prepare to meet strange, brave, bruised, electrically alive women there. Prepare to be riveted by their story and to live under its spell long after you’ve reached its astonishing end.” — Marisa de los Santos, author of Love Walked In and Belong to Me
“Lovely and captivating...The Lace Reader showcases Barry’s understanding of human nature. A splendid debut novel.” — Kristin Hannah, author of Firefly Lane
“The Lace Reader challenges the very notion of reality. A compelling, fast-action page turner. A terrific read!” — Diane Stern, CBS Radio, Boston
“Barry’s novel is that rare thing―a literary page-turner worthy for it’s story and for its art.” — Tom Jenks, editor of Narrative magazine
“Evocative, layered, smart, and astonishing, THE LACE READER is a fever dream of a novel that will haunt me for a long time to come. The Salem, Massachusetts that the Whitney women inhabit is a wild, dark place, and I loved every moment that I spent there.” — Joshilyn Jackson, author of The Girl Who Stopped Swimming
“What is real in The Lace Reader? What is not? To her credit Ms. Barry makes this story blithe and creepy in equal measure.... And there is much suspense invested in where all the lacunas in Towner’s impressions will lead her...There are clues planted everywhere.” — New York Times
“Barry’s modern-day story of Towner Whitney, who has the psychic gift to read the future in lace patterns, is complex but darker in subject matter.... The novel’s gripping and shocking conclusion is a testament to Barry’s creativity.” — USA Today
From the Back Cover
Every gift has a price . . . every piece of lace has a secret.
Towner Whitney, the self-confessed unreliable narrator, hails from a family of Salem women who can read the future in the patterns in lace, and who have guarded a history of secrets going back generations. Now the disappearance of two women is bringing Towner back home to Salem—and is bringing to light the shocking truth about the death of her twin sister.
About the Author
Born and raised in Massachusetts, Brunonia Barry lives in Salem with her husband and their beloved golden retriever, Byzantium.
Product details
- Publisher : William Morrow Paperbacks (August 18, 2009)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 416 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0061624772
- ISBN-13 : 978-0061624773
- Item Weight : 12.5 ounces
- Dimensions : 1 x 5.36 x 8.06 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #489,278 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #4,107 in Psychological Fiction (Books)
- #8,927 in Psychological Thrillers (Books)
- #25,942 in Suspense Thrillers
- Customer Reviews:
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About the author

Brunonia Barry is the New York Times and international best selling author of The Lace Reader and The Map of True Places. Her work has been translated into more than thirty languages. She was the first American author to win the International Women’s Fiction Festival’s Baccante Award and was a past recipient of Ragdale Artists’ Colony’s Strnad Fellowship as well as the winner of New England Book Festival’s award for Best Fiction and Amazon’s Best of the Month. Her reviews and articles on writing have appeared in The London Times and The Washington Post. Brunonia co-chairs the Salem Athenaeum’s Writers’ Committee. She lives in Salem with her husband Gary Ward and their dog, Angel. Her new novel, The Fifth Petal will be released by Penguin Random House/Crown in January 2017.
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The main character sucks you into the story by telling you that she is a liar on the first page.
One of the reasons why I love this book is that the author puts Salem on page, it's the places that I have gone
She not only is a good writer but she is a good storyteller, luring you in and making you believe the character who says upfront that she is a liar.
It is a mystery and every page has you thinking. There is a mild semi romance in it, but that's not the over all story arc, it's about a promise of one and one that works for me.
You don't know if the character is suffering from mental illness or she is physic, perhaps a little of both.
It's a dark story that takes you into truths that the main character cannot handle and has constructed ways around them. There are lots of questions at the end of the book, but all in all it was a great read. I have to give this book Five Stars....
Yay Finally A great book!
There was so much for me to like about the story, not the least of which was the structure. Prefacing each chapter was a snippet from a journal kept by one of the characters, called by the same name as the novel itself. More than just a random passage, they provided moments of foreshadowing for the rest of the book. Interesting, too, was the unique usage of perspective. I have read many books in alternating points of view, but not in this way. Towner's chapters were all in the first person, while Rafferty's were in the third. I have never seen the change in person as well as the change of POV. It was an interesting choice that I found I really liked.
Sometimes I read a novel that has ties to actual history and I find the ties too weak to be true relationships, skewing the history so much that it might as well be an alternate reality or history. Or the book will feel more like a history book than a novel. I found neither of these things to be true in any way. The nods to history were those that have long since been established, framing a story that was incredibly engrossing. The story was more than the Salem witches hook. It truly was the story of Towner, almost a coming of age, despite the fact that she was already an adult. It is a book filled with sadness, secrets, heartbreak, and fear, but it is also a book of acceptance, understanding, and love.
The characters in this novel are extremely varied. From Rafferty, the practical-minded cop with an open mind, to Towner, the tragic and damaged main character. The villain is truly frightening and reprehensible. May is one of those characters that makes you hate her at the same time as you may love her. But together, they create a cast that really drives the story.
Overall: It is not always a happy story, to be sure. There is a lot of pain and sadness. It isn't always easy to read, with Towner's story and the flashbacks to her childhood. But it is a beautifully written story. Such a great read!
It seemed as though this book couldn't quite decide whether it wanted to be a mystery, magical realism, psychological drama, or contemporary women's fiction. It settled out somewhat in the final third, when the various threads tied together.
Towner returns to her ancestral home town of Salem, Mass. following the death of her aunt Eva. Although Towner, we learn, has been hospitalized for mental illness and under psychiatric care, the folks in Salem seem truly crazy. Her mother May lives on an island nearby with numerous feral golden retrievers and runs an "underground railroad" of sorts for abused women. Towner's uncle Cal, a former America's Cup captain, has become a cult leader whose followers believe people are possessed by demons and that some of the women in town are actually witches. Her cousin or sister ( we aren't quite sure which) Lyndley drowned while trying to swim to the moon. And all of the women in the family, including Towner, can read the future in the patterns of lace.
Was Eva murdered? Did she kill herself? And what about the missing Calvinist, Angela - was she killed by Cal? And what about Towner's visions of ghosts, future events, and other strange things? All this stuff bogged down the first part of the book. Eventually, though, things are clarified. If it weren't for the ending, I'd have rated this 2 stars. So read only if you've got the patience to get through a disjointed, rambling narrative to get to the last third of the book.














