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Title: Waking the Moon by Elizabeth Hand ISBN: 0-06-105443-7 Publisher: Eos Pub. Date: 01 April, 1996 Format: Mass Market Paperback Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $6.99 |
Average Customer Rating: 4.02 (62 reviews)
Rating: 3
Summary: Interesting, but awkward
Comment: The awakening of an ancient, fiendish goddess in a new age is witnessed by a young college freshman named Sweeney Cassidy. As if an ancient, fiendish goddess awakening weren't bad enough, Sweeney's two best friends happen to be predestined pawns in the plans of the goddess and the Benandanti, a pseudo-religious sect of protectors. In fact, Sweeney's best friend, Angelica, becomes a sort of avatar for this goddess. The book spans Sweeney's 20 year ordeal to stop her best friend from unleashing a power bent on controlling the world.
This is the first book I've read by the author and I found the writing to be ornate; it bombards the reader's senses with rich descriptions of people, places, and things. Some readers are turned off by this type of writing (my wife says she just skims that stuff) but I find that sensory prose illuminates the story and Elizabeth Hand does this flourishingly. There are also a handful of very tasty surprises that continued to prod me curiously and expectantly forward.
My major complaints about the book include the mixture of first-person and third-person perspectives. Certainly, this is not a fundamental no-no that writers must avoid at all costs. However, by the end of the book I found Sweeney's narrative to be the only thing I really cared to hear about. The secondary characters, though interesting, simply didn't hold up against the profoundly mundane Sweeney struggling to cope with a twenty-year-old legacy of the bizarre, and her lover Dylan who is inextricably woven into it all. Sweeney's scenes were just so much more emotionally genuine that the others were buried by her. I would've enjoyed the book even more if it had been written entirely in first-person. In addition, I found the dialogue stilted in some spots, with a great number of "Hmms..." and "Well, thens..." And finally, Sweeney's affair with Dylan never seems to falter. Dylan is THE perfect man and he and Sweeney have THE perfect relationship. Given Dylan's heritage and age, I doubt their interactions could have been so sugary.
Ultimately, this is a good book and a fun read. I'd recommend it on the basis of the writing and the rather jarring surprises.
Rating: 5
Summary: Be seduced
Comment: Leaving her protective parents to go away to college, Sweeney Cassidy goes wild. She skips classes, stays out all night, and basically spends her first semester constantly drunk. Into this haze come the ethereal Oliver and the seductive Angelica, who become her best friends, and with both of whom Sweeney falls in love. The only trouble is, the school is controlled by an Illuminati-esque secret society; Angelica is a chosen avatar of a vengeful goddess; and Oliver is marked as her first sacrifice. This situation plays out tragically, and a shaken Sweeney transfers to another school, where she gets her degree and settles into "normal" life. Then, eighteen years later, her college ghosts come back to haunt her, as old friends come out of the woodwork, and Angelica prepares for the final denouement with the secret society. Sweeney is suddenly back in the mysterious world she glimpsed as a teenager.
Mixed in with this hypnotically written story is a political battle between the Matriarchy (represented by Angelica) and the Patriarchy (the secret society); between the Goddess and the world that has ignored her for millennia. One of the best touches of Hand's book is that she doesn't really take sides, except maybe to hint that the fault of both philosophies is the extremes they go to. Even when Sweeney makes her decision at the end, she makes it for personal reasons and not because she agrees with either side. This was the book that got me investigating Goddess mythology several years ago, and it's also a fever-dream of a story, with a sympathetic heroine and a unique style. I've read it a gazillion times.
Rating: 4
Summary: Rich, textured, depth, realism, emotion.
Comment: Despite a few clumsy transitions from description to action here and there, and despite an awkward timesharing between super-magical and super-real, this book is excellent. The characters are vivid, real enough to touch. The historical magic is handled intelligently and with a sense of high drama (if even well-done melodrama turns you off, beware). The book has style and strength. The prose is evocative, richly texturely, deeply involving. The topics range from practical love and human conflict to cultural issues spanning time and country. There's enough romance - of people, of place - to fill your head until you're breathless. I highly recommend it. Highly.
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Title: Winterlong: A Novel by Elizabeth Hand ISBN: 0061057304 Publisher: Harper Prism Pub. Date: July, 1997 List Price(USD): $13.00 |
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Title: Black Light by Elizabeth Hand ISBN: 0061057320 Publisher: HarperTorch Pub. Date: 04 April, 2000 List Price(USD): $5.99 |
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Title: The Store by Bentley Little ISBN: 0451192192 Publisher: Signet Pub. Date: July, 1998 List Price(USD): $6.99 |
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Title: Sineater by Elizabeth Massie ISBN: 0843944072 Publisher: Leisure Books Pub. Date: July, 1998 List Price(USD): $5.99 |
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Title: The Porcelain Dove or Constancy's Reward by Delia Sherman ISBN: 0525936084 Publisher: E P Dutton Pub. Date: May, 1993 List Price(USD): $22.00 |
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